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The History of John Milton's Literary Reputation : A Study in Editing, Criticism, and Taste

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This book distinguishes Milton's academic importance from his real status, and addresses readers with broad literary interests, who may be ready to think again about a poet whom Dryden saw as superior to both Homer and Virgil.

The work is therefore a contribution to the ongoing histories of Milton's reputation in particular, and literary taste in general.

This book is about one of England's greatest but most controversial poets.

The first two sections cover the early editing, influence and criticism of Milton's minor poems, and some later responses: critical debate on the pastoral poems, imitation of the sonnets, and editorial confusion over "At a Solemn Musick".

The third section concerns "Paradise Lost" and its ready recognition as a great poem by the Poet Laureate Dryden and his contemporaries.

Milton came to be considered almost equal to Shakespeare; his comparative loss of status was due to criticisms of both his theology and his style.

In the fourth and fifth sections, the former are studied in the polemics of Bishop Burgess, J.W.

Morris and some modern scholars; the latter in the critiques of Professor Walter Raleigh and Dr. F.R. Leavis.

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Product Details
Edwin Mellen Press Ltd
0773438025 / 9780773438026
Hardback
821.4
01/12/2010
United States
246 pages
Professional & Vocational/Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly/Undergraduate Learn More