Milton
This life of John Milton was first published in the English Men of Letters series in 1879. Its author, Mark Pattison (1813–84) spent most of his adult life in Oxford, as a student, a tutor, and eventually, from 1861, Rector of Lincoln College. Pattison's scholarly interest in religious thought in England, and in the history of classical learning after the Renaissance, made him the ideal biographer for the poet whose writing life was spent in justifying God's ways to man, and whose knowledge of Greek and Latin literature was almost unmatched. Pattison sees the life as divided into three periods: he provides a narrative of events and an analysis of Milton's literary output (both verse and prose) for each. The final chapter is a discussion of the major poems: Paradise Lost, Paradise Regained, and Samson Agonistes, concluding with the assertion of Milton's supremacy over all English writers except Shakespeare.
Product details
November 2011Paperback
9781108034753
234 pages
216 × 140 × 14 mm
0.3kg
Available
Table of Contents
- First Period. 1608–39:
- 1. Family - school - college
- 2. Residence at Horton - l'Allegro - Il Penseroso - Arcades - Comus - Lycidas
- 3. Journey to Italy
- Second Period. 1640–60:
- 4. Education theory - teaching
- 5. Marriage and pamphlet on divorce
- 6. Pamphlets
- 7. Biographical. 1640–9
- 8. The Latin secretaryship
- 9. Milton and Salmasius - blindness
- 10. Milton and Morus - the second defence – the defence for himself
- 11. Latin secretaryship comes to an end - Milton's friends
- Third Period. 1660–74:
- 12. Biographical - literary occupation - religious opinions
- 13. Paradise Lost - Paradise Regained - Samson Agonistes.