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1631:
1622:
663:
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51:
913:, Berkshire, from 1635 and undertook six years of self-directed private study. Hill argues that this was not retreat into a rural idyll; Hammersmith was then a "suburban village" falling into the orbit of London, and even Horton was becoming deforested and suffered from the plague. He read both ancient and modern works of theology, philosophy, history, politics, literature, and science in preparation for a prospective poetical career. Milton's intellectual development can be charted via entries in his
1993:
2770:, and Jonathan Richardson, the younger, co-wrote a book of criticism. In 1749, Thomas Newton published an extensive edition of Milton's poetical works with annotations provided by himself, Dryden, Pope, Addison, the Richardsons (father and son) and others. Newton's edition of Milton was a culmination of the honour bestowed upon Milton by early Enlightenment thinkers; it may also have been prompted by Richard Bentley's infamous edition, described above. Samuel Johnson wrote numerous essays on
456:
6889:
1247:, and, aged 34, married the 17-year-old Mary Powell. The marriage got off to a poor start as Mary did not adapt to Milton's austere lifestyle or get along with his nephews. Milton found her intellectually unsatisfying and disliked the royalist views she had absorbed from her family. It is also speculated that she refused to consummate the marriage. Mary soon returned home to her parents and did not come back until 1645, partly because of the outbreak of the
2528:, Milton argued that divorce was a private matter, not a legal or ecclesiastical one. Neither the Assembly nor Parliament condemned Milton or his ideas. In fact, when the Westminster Assembly wrote the Westminster Confession of Faith they allowed for divorce ('Of Marriage and Divorce,' Chapter 24, Section 5) in cases of infidelity or abandonment. Thus, the Christian community, at least a majority within the 'Puritan' sub-set, approved of Milton's views.
679:
3198:) began to appreciate "the composition of Milton's harmony ... how he loved to vary his pauses, his measures, and his feet, which gives that enchanting air of freedom and wilderness to his versification". By the 20th century, American poet and critic John Hollander would go so far as to say that Milton "was able, by plying that most remarkable instrument of English meter ... to invent a new mode of image-making in English poetry."
3292:
1280:, and he also begins to synthesize the ideal of neo-Roman liberty with that of Christian liberty. Milton also courted another woman during this time; we know nothing of her except that her name was Davis and she turned him down. However, it was enough to induce Mary Powell into returning to him which she did unexpectedly by begging him to take her back. They had two daughters in quick succession following their reconciliation.
1901:, probably written by Milton, lays out many of his heterodox theological views, and was not discovered and published until 1823. Milton's key beliefs were idiosyncratic, not those of an identifiable group or faction, and often they go well beyond the orthodoxy of the time. Their tone, however, stemmed from the Puritan emphasis on the centrality and inviolability of conscience. He was his own man, but he was anticipated by
1168:
6908:
3182:, and the shifting of pauses to all parts of the line. Milton deemed these features to be reflective of "the transcendental union of order and freedom". Admirers remained hesitant to adopt such departures from traditional metrical schemes: "The English ... had been writing separate lines for so long that they could not rid themselves of the habit". Isaac Watts preferred his lines distinct from each other, as did
1462:
3717:"When I consider how my light is spent" is one of the best known of Milton's sonnets. The last three lines (concluding with "They also serve who only stand and wait") are particularly well known, though rarely in context. The poem may have been written as early as 1652, although most scholars believe it was composed sometime between June and October 1655, when Milton's blindness was essentially complete.
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purpose, giving precise chapter and verse only in texts for a more specialized readership. As for the plenitude of Milton's quotations from scripture, Fletcher comments, "For this work, I have in all actually collated about twenty-five hundred of the five to ten thousand direct
Biblical quotations which appear therein". Milton's customary English Bible was the
921:. As a result of such intensive study, Milton is considered to be among the most learned of all English poets. In addition to his years of private study, Milton had command of Latin, Greek, Hebrew, French, Spanish, and Italian from his school and undergraduate days; he also added Old English to his linguistic repertoire in the 1650s while researching his
765:, an uneven compilation including first-hand reports. In the work, Aubrey quotes Christopher, Milton's younger brother: "When he was young, he studied very hard and sat up very late, commonly till twelve or one o'clock at night". Aubrey adds, "His complexion exceeding faire—he was so faire that they called him the Lady of Christ's College."
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1823:, was composed by the blind and impoverished Milton from 1658 to 1664 (first edition), with small but significant revisions published in 1674 (second edition). As a blind poet, Milton dictated his verse to a series of aides in his employ. It has been argued that the poem reflects his personal despair at the failure of the
846:. Despite developing a reputation for poetic skill and general erudition, Milton suffered from alienation among his peers during his time at Cambridge. Having once watched his fellow students attempting comedy upon the college stage, he later observed, "they thought themselves gallant men, and I thought them fools".
1988:‘some of humanity’s first scriptures on freedom of speech.’ 'Allow honest arguments to ignore attacks. It is foolish to doubt the power of education and leave others waiting. Letting it become impossible to cope. I have seen cases where people can refuse to show up and make themselves known in public competitions.
618:'s increasingly autocratic rule and Britain's breakdown into constitutional confusion and ultimately civil war. While once considered dangerously radical and heretical, Milton contributed to a seismic shift in accepted public opinions during his life that ultimately elevated him to public office in England. The
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sublime terror. Reaction to Milton's poetic worldview included, grudgingly, acknowledgement of the poet's resemblance to classical writers (Greek and Roman poetry being unrhymed). Blank verse came to be a recognised medium for religious works and for translations of the classics. Unrhymed lyrics like
1973:
Milton was a "passionately individual
Christian Humanist poet." He appears on the pages of seventeenth century English Puritanism, an age characterized as "the world turned upside down." He was a Puritan and yet was unwilling to surrender conscience to party positions on public policy. Thus, Milton's
1083:
He left
Florence in September to continue to Rome. With the connections from Florence, Milton was able to have easy access to Rome's intellectual society. His poetic abilities impressed those like Giovanni Salzilli, who praised Milton within an epigram. In late October, Milton attended a dinner given
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A fair theological summary may be that John Milton was a
Puritan, though his tendency to press further for liberty of conscience, sometimes out of conviction and often out of mere intellectual curiosity, made the great man, at least, a vital if not uncomfortable ally in the broader Puritan movement.
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His use of biblical citation was wide-ranging; Harris
Fletcher, standing at the beginning of the intensification of the study of the use of scripture in Milton's work (poetry and prose, in all languages Milton mastered), notes that typically Milton clipped and adapted biblical quotations to suit the
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In May 1638, accompanied by a manservant, Milton embarked upon a tour of France and Italy for 15 months that lasted until July or August 1639. His travels supplemented his study with new and direct experience of artistic and religious traditions, especially Roman
Catholicism. He met famous theorists
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This pursuit of freedom was largely a reaction against conservative values entrenched within the rigid heroic couplet. Within a dominant culture that stressed elegance and finish, he granted primacy to freedom, breadth and imaginative suggestiveness, eventually developed into the romantic vision of
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If any plead
Conscience ... for divorce for other causes than Christ and His Apostles mention; Of which a wicked booke is abroad and uncensured, though deserving to be burnt, whose Author, hath been so impudent as to set his Name to it, and dedicate it to your selves ... will you grant a Toleration
1978:
Milton's apparently contradictory stance on the vital problems of his age, arose from religious contestations, to the questions of the divine rights of kings. In both the cases, he seems in control, taking stock of the situation arising from the polarization of the
English society on religious and
1153:. In Venice, Milton was exposed to a model of Republicanism, later important in his political writings, but he soon found another model when he travelled to Geneva. From Switzerland, Milton travelled to Paris and then to Calais before finally arriving back in England in either July or August 1639.
1148:
who invited Milton to an opera hosted by the
Cardinal. Around March, Milton travelled once again to Florence, staying there for two months, attending further meetings of the academies, and spending time with friends. After leaving Florence, he travelled through Lucca, Bologna, and Ferrara before
1069:
In , which I have always admired above all others because of the elegance, not just of its tongue, but also of its wit, I lingered for about two months. There I at once became the friend of many gentlemen eminent in rank and learning, whose private academies I frequented—a
Florentine institution
885:
It appears in all his writings that he had the usual concomitant of great abilities, a lofty and steady confidence in himself, perhaps not without some contempt of others; for scarcely any man ever wrote so much, and praised so few. Of his praise he was very frugal; as he set its value high, and
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Dutch and Venetian constitutions, was for a council with perpetual membership. This attitude cut right across the grain of popular opinion of the time, which swung decisively behind the restoration of the Stuart monarchy that took place later in the year. Milton, an associate of and advocate on
2523:
Milton wrote during a period when thoughts about divorce were anything but simplistic; rather, there was active debate among thinkers and intellectuals at the time. However, Milton's basic approval of divorce within strict parameters set by the biblical witness was typical of many influential
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John Milton was neither a clergyman nor a theologian; however, theology, and particularly English Calvinism, formed the palette on which he created his greatest thoughts. Milton wrestled with the great doctrines of the Church amidst the theological crosswinds of his age. The great poet was
1262:, author of a 2008 biography of Milton, points to a lack of evidence and the dangers of cynicism in urging that it was not necessarily the case that the private life so animated the public polemicising.) In 1643, Milton had a brush with the authorities over these writings, in parallel with
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His blank-verse paragraph, and his audacious and victorious attempt to combine blank and rhymed verse with paragraphic effect in Lycidas, lay down indestructible models and patterns of English verse-rhythm, as distinguished from the narrower and more strait-laced forms of English
1921:
or animist materialism, the notion that a single material substance which is "animate, self-active, and free" composes everything in the universe: from stones and trees and bodies to minds, souls, angels, and God. Fallon claims that Milton devised this position to avoid the
629:, which started in 1642 and continued until 1651. By the time of his death in 1674, Milton was impoverished and on the margins of English intellectual life but famous throughout Europe and unrepentant for political choices that placed him at odds with governing authorities.
1716:, and lasted more than 12 years until Milton's death. (A plaque on the wall of Mynshull's House in Manchester describes Elizabeth as Milton's "3rd and Best wife".) Samuel Johnson, however, claims that Mynshull was "a domestic companion and attendant" and Milton's nephew
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They included "self-same", "hue", "minstrelsy", "murky", "carol", and "chaunt". Among Milton's naturalized Latin words were "humid", "orient", "hostil", "facil", "fervid", "jubilant", "ire", "bland", "reluctant", "palpable", "fragil", and "ornate". Peck 1740 pp.
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of heretical publications that threatened the religious and moral fabric of the nation; Milton responded by mocking him as "shallow Edwards" in the satirical sonnet "On the New Forcers of Conscience under the Long Parliament", usually dated to the latter half of
1556:
was issued, but was nevertheless arrested and briefly imprisoned before influential friends intervened, such as Marvell, now an MP. Milton married for a third and final time on 24 February 1663, marrying Elizabeth (Betty) Minshull, aged 24, a native of
1979:
political lines. He fought with the Puritans against the Cavaliers i.e. the King's party, and helped win the day. But the very same constitutional and republican polity, when tried to curtail freedom of speech, Milton, given his humanistic zeal, wrote
2215:, though "he was equipped to read the Bible in Latin, in Greek, and in Hebrew, including the Targumim or Aramaic paraphrases of the Old Testament, and the Syriac version of the New, together with the available commentaries of those several versions".
1476:
Cromwell's death in 1658 caused the English Republic to collapse into feuding military and political factions. Milton, however, stubbornly clung to the beliefs that had originally inspired him to write for the Commonwealth. In 1659, he published
1040:. He reached Florence in July 1638. While there, Milton enjoyed many of the sites and structures of the city. His candour of manner and erudite neo-Latin poetry earned him friends in Florentine intellectual circles, and he met the astronomer
2257:. A source has interpreted him as broadly Protestant, if not always easy to locate in a more precise religious category. In 2019, John Rogers stated, "Heretics both, John Milton and Isaac Newton were, as most scholars now agree, Arians."
3088:, in addition to his stylistic innovations (such as grandiloquence of voice and vision, peculiar diction and phraseology) influenced later poets. At the time, poetic blank verse was considered distinct from its use in verse drama, and
1361:. Milton worked more slowly than usual, given the European audience and the English Republic's desire to establish diplomatic and cultural legitimacy, as he drew on the learning marshalled by his years of study to compose a riposte.
2244:
argued that "In none of his great works is there a passage from which it can be inferred that he was an Arian; and in the very last of his writings he declares that "the doctrine of the Trinity is a plain doctrine in Scripture." In
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was published, Milton's stature as epic poet was immediately recognised. He cast a formidable shadow over English poetry in the 18th and 19th centuries; he was often judged equal or superior to all other English poets, including
2553:
Palmer expressed his disapproval in a sermon addressed to the Westminster Assembly. The Scottish commissioner Robert Baillie described Palmer's sermon as one "of the most Scottish and free sermons that ever I heard any where."
3155:, "is pure ... when the accent rests upon every second syllable through the whole line ... The repetition of this sound or percussion at equal times, is the most complete harmony of which a single verse is capable".
2190:
artists before him, Milton attempted to integrate Christian theology with classical modes. In his early poems, the poet narrator expresses a tension between vice and virtue, the latter invariably related to Protestantism. In
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were "sad tidings of civil war in England." Matters became more complicated when Milton received word that his childhood friend Diodati had died. Milton in fact stayed another seven months on the continent and spent time at
2424:"Christian and Humanist, Protestant, patriot and heir of the golden ages of Greece and Rome, he faced what appeared to him to be the birth-pangs of a new and regenerate England with high excitement and idealistic optimism."
2011:
Milton's political thought may be best categorized according to respective periods in his life and times. The years 1641–42 were dedicated to church politics and the struggle against episcopacy. After his divorce writings,
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857:. While at Cambridge, he wrote some of his well-known shorter English poems, including "On the Morning of Christ's Nativity", "Epitaph on the admirable Dramaticke Poet, W. Shakespeare" (his first poem to appear in print),
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in 1734, "Mr. Milton is esteemed the parent and author of blank verse among us". "Miltonic verse" might be synonymous for a century with blank verse as poetry, a new poetic terrain independent from both the drama and the
2858:, he wrote: "No person seems better to have understood the secret of heightening, or of setting terrible things, if I may use the expression, in their strongest light, by the force of a judicious obscurity than Milton."
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Christian intellectuals, particularly the Westminster divines. Milton addressed the Assembly on the matter of divorce in August 1643, at a moment when the Assembly was beginning to form its opinion on the matter. In the
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He was supported by his father's investments, but Milton became a private schoolmaster at this time, educating his nephews and other children of the well-to-do. This experience and discussions with educational reformer
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The course of human history, the immediate impact of the civil disorders, and his own traumatic personal life, are all regarded by Milton as typical of the predicament he describes as "the misery that has bin since
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for "the liberty to know, to utter, and to argue freely according to conscience, above all liberties" to the conflicting Protestant denominations. According to American historian William Hunter, "Milton argued for
1491:, denouncing corrupt practises in church governance. As the Republic disintegrated, Milton wrote several proposals to retain a non-monarchical government against the wishes of parliament, soldiers, and the people.
3920:
Skerpan-Wheeler, Elizabeth. "John Milton." British Rhetoricians and Logicians, 1500–1660: Second Series. Ed. Edward A. Malone. Detroit: Gale, 2003. Dictionary of Literary Biography Vol. 281. Literature Resource
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as the Protectorate was set up; though subsequently he had major reservations. When Cromwell seemed to be backsliding as a revolutionary, after a couple of years in power, Milton moved closer to the position of
1298:; Milton's political reputation got him appointed Secretary for Foreign Tongues by the Council of State in March 1649. His main job description was to compose the English Republic's foreign correspondence in
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to be not the republic itself, but the fact that it was not a proper republic. Woolrych speaks of "the gulf between Milton's vision of the Commonwealth's future and the reality". In the early version of his
1413:
in 1655. Milton held the appointment of Secretary for Foreign Tongues to the Commonwealth Council of State until 1660, although after he had become totally blind, most of the work was done by his deputies,
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to study Milton! The problem, rather, was to escape from an influence that was so difficult to escape from because it was unrecognized, belonging, as it did, to the climate of the habitual and 'natural'."
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1665:. According to an early biographer, his funeral was attended by "his learned and great Friends in London, not without a friendly concourse of the Vulgar." A monument was added in 1793, sculpted by
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Milton also was disdainful of the university curriculum, which consisted of stilted formal debates conducted in Latin on abstruse topics. His own corpus is not devoid of humour, notably his sixth
3368:
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to a memorial collection for one of his fellow-students at Cambridge. Drafts of these poems are preserved in Milton's poetry notebook, known as the Trinity Manuscript, because it is now kept at
3194:, whose general opinion it was that Milton's frequent omission of the initial unaccented foot was "displeasing to a nice ear". It was not until the late 18th century that poets (beginning with
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undoubtedly Reformed (though his grandfather, Richard "the Ranger" Milton had been Roman Catholic). However, Milton's Calvinism had to find expression in a broad-spirited Humanism. Like many
1917:
While Milton's beliefs are generally considered to be consistent with Protestant Christianity, Stephen Fallon argues that by the late 1650s, Milton may have at least toyed with the idea of
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T. S. Eliot believed that "of no other poet is it so difficult to consider the poetry simply as poetry, without our theological and political dispositions ... making unlawful entry".
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for £5 (equivalent to approximately £770 in 2015 purchasing power), with a further £5 to be paid if and when each print run sold out of between 1,300 and 1,500 copies. The first run was a
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fell from power, he envisaged a step towards a freer republic or "free commonwealth", writing in the hope of this outcome in early 1660. Milton had argued for an awkward position, in the
3114:
This neglect then of Rhime ... is to be esteem'd an example set, the first in English, of ancient liberty recover'd to heroic Poem from the troublesom and modern bondage of Rimeing.
2961:, responded to the points made by Eliot, in particular the claim that "the study of Milton could be of no help: it was only a hindrance", by arguing, "As if it were a matter of deciding
725:
was located. The elder Milton was noted for his skill as a composer of music, and this talent left his son with a lifelong appreciation for music and friendships with musicians such as
3656:
2481:
Milton's thinking on divorce caused him considerable trouble with the authorities. An orthodox Presbyterian view of the time was that Milton's views on divorce constituted a one-man
1001:. There are other records, including some letters and some references in his other prose tracts, but the bulk of the information about the tour comes from a work that, according to
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predicted would arrive in England. Milton, however, would later criticise the "worldly" millenarian views of these and others, and expressed orthodox ideas on the prophecy of the
579:
as "a poem which ... with respect to design may claim the first place, and with respect to performance, the second, among the productions of the human mind", though he (a
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Before Milton, "the sense of regular rhythm ... had been knocked into the English head so securely that it was part of their nature". The "Heroick measure", according to
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in London, where he began the study of Latin and Greek; the classical languages left an imprint on both his poetry and prose in English (he also wrote in Latin and Italian).
3640:
2993:—"A good book is the precious lifeblood of a master spirit, embalmed and treasured up on purpose to a life beyond life"—is displayed in many public libraries, including the
1136:, Milton proclaimed that he was warned against a return to Rome because of his frankness about religion, but he stayed in the city for two months and was able to experience
815:
notes that Milton was apparently rusticated, and that the differences between Chappell and Milton may have been either religious or personal. It is also possible that, like
1704:
Milton married for a third time on 24 February 1663 to Elizabeth Mynshull or Minshull (1638–1728), the niece of Thomas Mynshull, a wealthy apothecary and philanthropist in
1694:
Mary Powell died on 5 May 1652 from complications following Deborah's birth. Milton's daughters survived to adulthood, but he always had a strained relationship with them.
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by elevating notions of purity and virtue over the conventions of court revelry and superstition. In his later poems, Milton's theological concerns become more explicit.
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Saintsbury, George. "The Peace of the Augustans: A Survey of Eighteenth Century Literature as a Place of Rest and Refreshment". London: Oxford University Press. 1946.
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pauses, most agreed, were best placed at the middle and the end of the line. In order to support this symmetry, lines were most often octo- or deca-syllabic, with no
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had already identified "mutual solace" as a principal goal in marriage. Milton abandoned his campaign to legitimise divorce after 1645, but he expressed support for
5371:
John Milton, The Prose Works of John Milton: With a Biographical Introduction by Rufus Wilmot Griswold. In Two Volumes (Philadelphia: John W. Moore, 1847). Vol. 1.
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Title page of a 1752–1761 edition of "The Poetical Works of John Milton with Notes of Various Authors by Thomas Newton" printed by J. & R. Tonson in the Strand
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and gain the support of the republicans, but without offering a democratic solution of any kind. His proposal, backed by reference (amongst other reasons) to the
625:
Milton's views developed from extensive reading, travel, and experience that began with his days as a student at Cambridge in the 1620s and continued through the
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identified some examples of Milton's "old" words (now popular). The "Miltonian dialect", as it was called, was emulated by later poets; Pope used the diction of
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praised him for having the power of 'displaying the vast, illuminating the splendid, enforcing the awful, darkening the gloomy and aggravating the dreadful.''
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translation, while the lyric poetry of Gray and Collins was frequently criticised for their use of "obsolete words out of Spenser and Milton". The language of
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found the yoke of Milton's style uncongenial; he exclaimed that "Miltonic verse cannot be written but in an artful or rather artist's humour." Keats felt that
1869:
in 1671. Both of these works also reflect Milton's post-Restoration political situation. Just before his death in 1674, Milton supervised a second edition of
1827:
yet affirms an ultimate optimism in human potential. Some literary critics have argued that Milton encoded many references to his unyielding support for the "
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Many Enlightenment thinkers of the 18th century revered and commented on Milton's poetry and non-poetical works. In addition to John Dryden, among them were
2020:, and in polemic justification of the regicide and the existing Parliamentarian regime. Then in 1659–60 he foresaw the Restoration and wrote to head it off.
1739:
Milton's poetry was slow to see the light of day, at least under his name. His first published poem was "On Shakespeare" (1630), anonymously included in the
1214:
1731:(sons of Milton's sister Anne), were educated by Milton and became writers themselves. John acted as a secretary, and Edward was Milton's first biographer.
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4138:
5243:
Austin Woolrych, Last Quest for Settlement 1657–1660, p. 202, in G. E. Aylmer (editor), The Interregnum: The Quest for Settlement 1646–1660 (1972), p. 17.
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A brief History of Moscovia, and other less known Countries lying Eastward of Russia as far as Cathay, gathered from the writings of several Eye-witnesses
2657:. Modern scholars of Milton's life, politics, and work are known as Miltonists: "his work is the subject of a very large amount of academic scholarship".
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632:
Milton is regarded as one of the greatest poets of English literature even though criticism animadverting his oeuvre came from notable quarters such as
2148:... John Streater, and the form of republicanism he stood for, was a fulfilment of Milton's most optimistic ideas of free speech and of public heroism
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History was particularly important for the political class of the period, and Lewalski considers that Milton "more than most illustrates" a remark of
1226:, with frequent passages of real eloquence lighting up the rough controversial style of the period, and deploying a wide knowledge of church history.
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was very popular; it influenced Friedrich Gottlieb Klopstock. The German-language Milton tradition returned to England in the person of the artist
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544:. His desire for freedom extended beyond his philosophy and was reflected in his style, which included his introduction of new words (coined from
10955:
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568:
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3014:. Pullman was concerned to produce a version of Milton's poem accessible to teenagers, and has spoken of Milton as "our greatest public poet".
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With the Parliamentary victory in the Civil War, Milton used his pen in defence of the republican principles represented by the Commonwealth.
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of 1660 and his loss of vision later deprived Milton much of his public platform, but he used the period to develop many of his major works.
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3536:
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W.F. Draper, "The Religious Life and Opinions of John Milton." In "The Bibliotheca Sacra and Biblical Repository," Volume 17 (1860) p. 38.
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2582:, and their republican attitudes. Milton himself wrote that "Worthy deeds are not often destitute of worthy relaters", in Book II of his
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considers that although they were quite close, there is "little real affinity, beyond a broad republicanism", between their approaches.
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3278:, a versification of Psalm 136. His 'L'Allegro' and 'Il Penseroso', with additional material, were magnificently set by Handel (1740).
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to 'The Lord Generall Cromwell in May 1652' beginning "Cromwell, our chief of men ...", although it was not published until 1654.
6247:
2240:, based on a non-trinitarian creed. Milton's alleged Arianism, like much of his theology, is still subject of debate and controversy.
1592:(except for Catholics), and a translation of a Polish tract advocating an elective monarchy. Both these works were referred to in the
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3205:, as well as obsolete words already dropped from popular usage so completely that their meanings were no longer understood. In 1740,
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toward the end of November, where he stayed only for a month because of the Spanish control. During that time, he was introduced to
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and his wife Sarah Jeffrey. The senior John Milton (1562–1647) moved to London around 1583 after being disinherited by his devout
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11005:
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Saintsbury, George. "A History of English Prosody: From the Twelfth Century to the Present Day". London: Macmillan and Co., 1908.
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most congenial. He never went to any religious services in his later years. When a servant brought back accounts of sermons from
1005:, "was not intended as autobiography but as rhetoric, designed to emphasise his sterling reputation with the learned of Europe."
897:
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and intellectuals of the time and was able to display his poetic skills. For specific details of what happened within Milton's "
780:
in 1629, ranking fourth of 24 honours graduates that year in the University of Cambridge. Preparing, at that time, to become an
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1600:—because he was Roman Catholic. That debate preoccupied politics in the 1670s and 1680s and precipitated the formation of the
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recounted how he had been alienated from the Church of England by Archbishop William Laud, and then moved similarly from the
1446:
744:. Young's influence also served as the poet's introduction to religious radicalism. After Young's tutorship, Milton attended
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in the midst of the excitement attending the possibility of establishing a new English government. The anonymous edition of
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Williams, Arnold (March 1941). "Renaissance Commentaries on "Genesis" and Some Elements of the Theology of Paradise Lost".
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6650:
3576:
1521:
1290:
1145:
10696:
1850:
per copy (about £23 in 2015 purchasing power equivalent), published in August 1667, and it sold out in eighteen months.
1630:
8971:
7829:
7154:
6963:
6608:
6567:
5828:"Audience and human nature in the poetry of Milton and Dryden/Milton ve Dryden'in siirlerinde izleyici ve insan dogasi"
5810:
5757:
5265:
4875:
4346:
3896:
3528:
1212:(a group of Presbyterian divines named from their initials; the "TY" belonged to Milton's old tutor Thomas Young), and
4952:
2660:
In 2008, John Milton Passage, a short passage by Bread Street into St Mary-le-Bow Churchyard in London, was unveiled.
2478:
to bring greater reform to the Church of England. The Assembly convened on 1 July against the will of King Charles I.
1974:
political thought, driven by competing convictions, a Reformed faith and a Humanist spirit, led to enigmatic outcomes.
1621:
1561:, Cheshire. He spent the remaining decade of his life living quietly in London, only retiring to a cottage during the
10975:
7108:
4946:
4727:
4688:
Lindenbaum, Peter (1995). "Authors and Publishers in the Late Seventeenth Century: New Evidence on their Relations".
4548:
Walter Thornbury, 'Cripplegate', in Old and New London: Volume 2 (London, 1878), pp. 229-245. British History Online
4336:
3331:
2039:
conceptions of political freedom join hands in common opposition to the disengaged and passive subjection offered by
1162:
1024:, a Dutch law philosopher, playwright, and poet. Milton left France soon after this meeting. He travelled south from
583:) described Milton's politics as those of an "acrimonious and surly republican". Milton was revered by poets such as
484:
and including twelve books, was written in a time of immense religious flux and political upheaval. It addressed the
886:
considered his mention of a name as a security against the waste of time, and a certain preservative from oblivion.
10641:
9091:
8802:
8722:
8702:
7457:
7273:
4284:
3436:
2614:
2610:
2396:
2082:
1666:
662:
580:
4362:
3106:
Lack of rhyme was sometimes taken as Milton's defining innovation. He himself considered the rhymeless quality of
1701:. She died on 3 February 1658, less than four months after giving birth to her daughter Katherine, who also died.
9597:
9448:
7598:
7297:
7241:
5870:
3695:
3648:
3218:
2515:
2490:
2471:
2364:'s blindness and captivity—mirroring Milton's own lost sight—may be a metaphor for England's blind acceptance of
1896:
1070:
which deserves great praise not only for promoting humane studies but also for encouraging friendly intercourse.
3017:
Titles of a number of other well-known literary works are also derived from Milton's writings. Examples include
1302:
and other languages, but he also was called upon to produce propaganda for the regime and to serve as a censor.
10945:
10930:
10798:
10651:
9537:
6983:
6968:
6658:
6433:
6043:
5563:
4996:"Areopagitica: A Speech of Mr. John Milton for the Liberty of Unlicenc'd Printing, to the Parlament of England"
4788:
3313:
2729:
and based on that a standard verse translation by Ernest Gottlieb von Berge. A subsequent prose translation by
854:
769:
713:. In London, the senior John Milton married Sarah Jeffrey (1572–1637) and found lasting financial success as a
603:
115:
7572:
6001:
1341:, a phenomenal best-seller popularly attributed to Charles I that portrayed the King as an innocent Christian
11105:
10960:
10838:
10711:
9933:
8964:
8692:
8203:
7202:
6958:
4607:
Dates in this section are taken from John Milton's autograph memoranda in his Bible, in the British Library,
3592:
2767:
2470:
in 1643, at the beginning of the English Civil War. In August of that year, he presented his thoughts to the
2413:
2040:
1698:
1366:
1269:
Areopagitica; A speech of Mr. John Milton for the Liberty of Unlicenc'd Printing, to the Parlament of England
1266:, who had more trouble. It was the hostile response accorded the divorce tracts that spurred Milton to write
6510:
The Grand Tour and the Great Rebellion: Richard Lassels and 'The Voyage of Italy' in the Seventeenth Century
5656:
Ernest Sirluck, "Introduction", Complete Prose Works of John Milton, New Haven: Yale U. Press, 1959, II, 103
2897:, was unsatisfactory to the author because, amongst other things, it had too many "Miltonic inversions". In
2027:. In coming centuries, Milton would be claimed as an early apostle of liberalism. According to James Tully:
955:
composed for noble patrons, connections of the Egerton family, and performed in 1632 and 1634 respectively.
811:, Chappell "whipt" Milton. This story is now disputed, though certainly Milton disliked Chappell. Historian
11165:
11150:
11055:
11050:
10995:
10736:
10731:
10425:
9463:
9096:
8762:
8631:
6663:
5593:
3309:
1923:
1650:
1640:
812:
745:
733:
691:
511:
elevated Milton's reputation as one of history's greatest poets. He also served as a civil servant for the
105:
31:
3241:
exhibited a steadily increasing attention to the connotative, the imaginative and poetic, value of words.
2208:
1123:
and then on to Greece, but he returned to England during the summer of 1639 because of what he claimed in
11140:
11100:
11095:
11085:
11040:
11025:
10751:
10746:
10531:
8064:
7377:
7331:
5576:
3275:
2827:
2811:
2802:
2452:. Rather than force a man's conscience, government should recognise the persuasive force of the gospel."
2298:
1017:
835:
3010:
trilogy is derived from a quotation, "His dark materials to create more worlds", line 915 of Book II in
2976:, wrote that "Milton is the central problem in any theory and history of poetic influence in English ".
2130:; but not Marvell, who remained with Cromwell's party. Milton had already commended Overton, along with
1258:
over the next three years arguing for the legality and morality of divorce beyond grounds of adultery. (
11030:
9416:
9076:
8945:
7591:
7524:
7439:
7146:
6630:
5831:
5635:
3223:
2461:
2420:
Writing of the enigmatic and often conflicting views of Milton in the Puritan age, David Daiches wrote,
1553:
1419:
1357:. By January of the following year, Milton was ordered to write a defence of the English people by the
1294:(1649) defended the right of the people to hold their rulers to account, and implicitly sanctioned the
1255:
980:
827:
307:
9733:
8208:
4938:
Areopagitica, with a commentary by Sir Richard C. Jebb, and with supplementary material | WorldCat.org
2695:, providing an extensive apparatus of annotation and commentary, particularly chasing down allusions.
2270:, and bishops as Egyptian taskmasters. These analogies conform to Milton's puritanical preference for
1649:
Milton died on 8 November 1674, just a month before his 66th birthday. He was buried in the church of
567:", though critical reception has oscillated in the centuries since his death, often on account of his
9780:
9723:
9308:
8832:
8782:
7712:
7212:
7179:
6978:
6973:
6928:
6498:
6113:
3608:
3233:) was self-consciously modelled after the Miltonian dialect, with the same tone and sensibilities as
2899:
2646:
2180:
2107:
2072:
1968:
1479:
1310:
1093:
878:
796:
657:
4980:
2718:
also finds Pearce to be more sympathetic to Bentley's underlying line of thought than is warranted.
11170:
11110:
10990:
10621:
8822:
8772:
8581:
7871:
7121:
5713:
3496:
3053:
2972:
2532:
1949:
when he has angels eat (5.433–439) and apparently engage in sexual intercourse (8.622–629) and the
1358:
1244:
1223:
1057:
741:
516:
419:
17:
2873:
began his sonnet "London, 1802" with "Milton! thou should'st be living at this hour" and modelled
2102:, to whom he wrote a sonnet in 1652. The group of disaffected republicans included, besides Vane,
556:. He was the first modern writer to employ unrhymed verse outside of the theatre or translations.
11090:
10950:
10601:
10521:
9938:
9527:
9438:
8902:
8213:
7136:
6038:
Leader, Zachary. "Revision and Romantic Authorship". Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999. 298.
5920:
Nos 267, 273, 279, 285, 291, 297, 303, 309, 315, 321, 327, 333, 339, 345, 351, 357, 363, and 369.
5228:
Literature and Politics in Cromwellian England: John Milton, Andrew Marvell and Marchamont Nedham
5026:
Literature and Politics in Cromwellian England: John Milton, Andrew Marvell and Marchamont Nedham
4549:
3779:
3520:
3302:
3229:
3033:
2994:
2391:
expresses Milton's continuing belief in the promise of Christian salvation through Jesus Christ.
2218:
Milton embraced many heterodox Christian theological views. He has been accused of rejecting the
2115:
1902:
1847:
1248:
1105:
773:
512:
10335:
8566:
6425:
6419:
4724:, 2010, "Purchasing Power of British Pounds from 1264 to Present". Access date: 13 January 2017"
2762:, Joseph Addison wrote extensive notes, annotations, and interpretations of certain passages of
1378:
quickly made him a European reputation, and the work ran to numerous editions. He addressed his
1100:. He also attended musical events, including oratorios, operas, and melodramas. Milton left for
10970:
9928:
9908:
9758:
9428:
9056:
8188:
8100:
7370:
7338:
7325:
7315:
7095:
7008:
5442:
Snobelen, Stephen D. (December 1999). "Isaac Newton, heretic: the strategies of a Nicodemite".
5144:
Creaser, John (March 2000). "Prosodic Style and Conceptions of Liberty in Milton and Marvell".
5040:, ed. David Armitage, Armand Himy, and Quentin Skinner (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995).
3888:
3876:
3468:
3419:
3120:
3077:
2945:
were particularly inspired by Milton's poetry and biography. Hostile 20th-century criticism by
2714:
judges that, as critic, Bentley was both acute and wrong-headed, and "incorrigibly eccentric";
2099:
2017:
1935:
1728:
1720:
relates that Mynshull "oppressed his children in his lifetime, and cheated them at his death".
1562:
1528:(which led to the restoration of the monarchy). The work is an impassioned, bitter, and futile
1499:
1053:
792:
702:
312:
9795:
6225:
4450:
Shawcross, John T. (1986). "The Poet in the Poem: John Milton's Presence in "Paradise Lost"".
1769:
was signed J. M. Otherwise. The 1645 collection was the only poetry of his to see print until
1445:
who copied them out for him; one of these was Andrew Marvell. One of his best-known sonnets, "
1429:
By 1652, Milton had become totally blind; the cause of his blindness is debated but bilateral
1397:, now Lord Protector, while exhorting him to remain true to the principles of the Revolution.
1144:, a Vatican librarian who guided Milton through its collection. He was introduced to Cardinal
928:
11145:
11115:
10082:
10037:
9848:
9443:
8907:
8897:
8792:
8318:
8273:
7776:
7024:
5315:
4503:
Lewalski, Barbara Kiefer (1959). "Milton: Political Beliefs and Polemical Methods, 1659–60".
2688:
2535:, a member of the Westminster Assembly, condemned Milton in the strongest possible language:
2365:
2241:
2103:
1576:
During this period, Milton published several minor prose works, such as the grammar textbook
1409:), published an attack on Milton, in response to which Milton published the autobiographical
1346:
1085:
9898:
6073:
3201:
Milton's pursuit of liberty extended into his vocabulary as well. It included many Latinate
1309:
The back of no 19 York Street (1848). In 1651, Milton moved into a "pretty garden-house" in
606:, and then travelled, wrote poetry mostly for private circulation, and launched a career as
10965:
10875:
10870:
10865:
10591:
10471:
10240:
10047:
9888:
9815:
9507:
9468:
9453:
8987:
8912:
8712:
8173:
7031:
6921:
6712:
6578:
6545:
6251:
5186:
3861:
3258:
3179:
3023:
2782:
2758:
2680:
2449:
2394:
Though he maintained his personal faith in spite of the defeats suffered by his cause, the
2349:
2266:, Milton expressed his dislike for Catholicism and episcopacy, presenting Rome as a modern
2211:. When citing and writing in other languages, he usually employed the Latin translation by
2196:
2135:
615:
541:
10062:
8511:
8298:
8233:
6802:
6199:
4481:
1712:
in the City of London. Despite a 31-year age gap, the marriage seemed happy, according to
8:
11155:
11065:
10781:
10661:
10631:
10551:
10077:
10017:
9338:
9258:
8752:
8313:
8258:
8178:
8120:
8003:
7898:
7628:
7556:
7551:
7493:
3398:
3175:
3068:
2806:
2730:
2654:
2301:, Milton often presents England, rescued from the trappings of a worldly monarchy, as an
2212:
1744:
1654:
1605:
1597:
1566:
1545:
1218:. He vigorously attacked the High-church party of the Church of England and their leader
1113:
960:
947:
683:
641:
360:
9825:
4749:
Darbishire, Helen (October 1941). "The Printing of the First Edition of Paradise Lost".
1799:
1313:. He lived there until the Restoration. Later it became No. 19 York Street, belonged to
10793:
10788:
10771:
10766:
10235:
9743:
9680:
8872:
8531:
8496:
8406:
7933:
7766:
7717:
7362:
5745:
5502:
5494:
5459:
5416:
5328:
5295:
5161:
5157:
4968:
4766:
4528:
4520:
4455:
4317:
3805:
3006:
2870:
2843:
2679:, an early enthusiast, in 1677 began the trend of describing Milton as the poet of the
2236:
1601:
1570:
1430:
1354:
1185:
619:
588:
564:
10225:
8481:
4427:
4402:
3828:
The Works of Samuel Johnson, LL. D.: An essay on the life and genius of Samuel Johnson
2891:
was a "beautiful and grand curiosity", but his own unfinished attempt at epic poetry,
2332:
The Restoration of the Stuart monarchy in 1660 began a new phase in Milton's work. In
1873:, accompanied by an explanation of "why the poem rhymes not", and prefatory verses by
10756:
10701:
10541:
10330:
9992:
9918:
9893:
9695:
9497:
8661:
8561:
8526:
8351:
8328:
8323:
8198:
7814:
7804:
7653:
7638:
7614:
7466:
7082:
6884:
6654:
6604:
6563:
6439:
6429:
6147:
6069:
6039:
5891:
5806:
5753:
5559:
5506:
5463:
5420:
5261:
5165:
4942:
4871:
4701:
4532:
4432:
4342:
4227:
3892:
3452:
2711:
2338:
2322:
2056:
1859:
1824:
1751:
has been suggested to contain marginal notes by Milton. Milton collected his work in
1709:
1469:
1305:
1263:
933:
910:
687:
626:
537:
9810:
8431:
8125:
5771:
2222:, believing instead that the Son was subordinate to the Father, a position known as
1931:
732:
The prosperity of Milton's father allowed his eldest son to obtain a private tutor,
10761:
10691:
10461:
10380:
10375:
10300:
10275:
10220:
10210:
10200:
10170:
10150:
10140:
10007:
10002:
9960:
9903:
9700:
9383:
9378:
9353:
9298:
9273:
8917:
8591:
8551:
8541:
8491:
8476:
8466:
8426:
8386:
8376:
8253:
8223:
8183:
8069:
7905:
7883:
7673:
7663:
7501:
7248:
7207:
7089:
7038:
6893:
6782:
The Human Satan in Seventeenth-Century English Literature: From Milton to Rochester
5486:
5451:
5406:
5320:
5313:
Baldwin, E. C. (1921). "The Authorized Version's Influence Upon Milton's Diction".
5153:
4758:
4693:
4569:
4512:
4422:
4414:
4391:
John Leonard, in the introduction to "Paradise Lost", Penguin Classics page ix 2000
4143:
3855:
3664:
3600:
3460:
3183:
3043:
2668:
2445:
2344:
2171:
behalf of the regicides, was silenced on political matters as Charles II returned.
2153:
2140:
1865:
1181:
1089:
1002:
997:
941:
932:
Commemorative blue plaque 'John Milton lived here 1632–1638' at Berkyn Manor Farm,
914:
820:
777:
553:
396:
10365:
8586:
6653:, John Milton: A Hero of Our Time (Counterpoint Press: London and New York, 2009)
5258:
The Arms of the Family: The Significance of John Milton's Relatives and Associates
4792:
4697:
4162:
3738:
3431:(Commonly referred to as "On his blindness", though Milton did not use this title)
2249:
Milton classified Arians and Socinians as "errorists" and "schismatics" alongside
2023:
Milton's own beliefs were in some cases unpopular, particularly his commitment to
795:(suspended) in his first year at Cambridge for quarrelling with his tutor, Bishop
10818:
10491:
10410:
10370:
10340:
10325:
10290:
10285:
10255:
10230:
10215:
10190:
10175:
10110:
10087:
10072:
10057:
10042:
9913:
9868:
9853:
9843:
9665:
9660:
9517:
9512:
9492:
9480:
8867:
8862:
8626:
8571:
8556:
8536:
8516:
8471:
8446:
8356:
8308:
8293:
8193:
8153:
8044:
8039:
7866:
7754:
7668:
7643:
7320:
6875:
6596:
6586:
6512:(Geneva, CIRVI, 1985) and "Milton's Visit to Vallombrosa: A literary tradition",
6141:
6127:
6121:
5954:
5062:
4762:
4665:
4556:
3812:
3191:
3187:
3048:
3038:
2893:
2699:
2638:
2630:
2475:
2379:
Despite the Restoration of the monarchy, Milton did not lose his personal faith;
2357:
2310:
2291:
2094:
2087:
2076:
2060:
2036:
1724:
1717:
1525:
1503:
1406:
1398:
1394:
1322:
1197:
918:
839:
752:
706:
599:
598:
Phases of Milton's life parallel the major historical and political divisions in
533:
520:
293:
50:
6880:
6871:
5689:
Milton's History of Britain: republican historiography in the English Revolution
5545:
Hill, C. Milton and the English Revolution. Faber & Faber. 1977. pp. 155–157
3987:
Pfeiffer, Robert H. (April 1955). "The Teaching of Hebrew in Colonial America".
2706:. Bentley was considered presumptuous and was attacked in the following year by
10808:
10716:
10706:
10435:
10310:
10295:
10270:
10265:
10260:
10205:
10180:
10135:
10115:
9977:
9948:
9923:
9878:
9858:
9820:
9775:
9655:
9645:
9502:
9333:
9146:
8922:
8812:
8742:
8641:
8616:
8486:
8456:
8416:
8381:
8238:
8163:
8148:
8143:
8034:
8024:
7734:
7685:
7546:
7126:
7116:
7045:
6846:
6797:
6683:
6600:
6274:
4147:
3504:
3488:
3360:
3171:
3152:
3100:
3001:
2934:
2904:
2850:
concept. For Burke, it was to set alongside mountain-tops, a storm at sea, and
2846:, and he regarded Milton's description of Hell as exemplary of sublimity as an
2822:
2753:
2745:
2741:
2715:
2707:
2634:
2622:
2505:
2353:
2262:
2231:
2163:
2131:
2119:
2068:
1992:
1874:
1839:
1828:
1596:
debate, the attempt to exclude the heir presumptive from the throne of England—
1593:
1438:
1423:
1393:, a work that made many personal attacks on Milton. The second defence praised
1337:
1314:
1231:
1109:
992:
892:
843:
785:
737:
722:
645:
637:
572:
560:
504:
6751:
John Milton and the English Revolution: A Study in the Sociology of Literature
5617:, ed. Merritt Hughes (Hackett: Indianapolis, 2003), pp. 994–1000; Leo Miller,
5581:, Milton Quarterly Vol. 42 Issue 1, pp. 1–21. Published online: 17 April 2008"
5455:
4132:
3769:
3142:
A second aspect of Milton's blank verse was the use of unconventional rhythm:
2531:
Nevertheless, reaction among Puritans to Milton's views on divorce was mixed.
2520:, the theological treatise that provides the clearest evidence for his views.
1953:, where he denies the dual natures of man and argues for a theory of Creation
1364:
On 24 February 1652, Milton published his Latin defence of the English people
850:
10859:
10741:
10571:
10481:
10430:
10400:
10390:
10320:
10315:
10305:
10165:
10155:
10145:
10120:
9987:
9965:
9883:
9790:
9763:
9748:
9690:
9373:
8927:
8636:
8621:
8611:
8596:
8546:
8501:
8461:
8396:
8391:
8361:
8228:
8168:
8110:
7834:
7648:
7398:
7197:
7075:
6746:
6582:
6535:
4705:
4624:. Edinburgh: Harding & Wright. 1810. p. 49 – via Google Books.
3584:
3477:
On his Deceased wife, To The Nightingale, On reaching the Age of twenty four.
3444:
3271:
3090:
3028:
2831:, Blake uses Milton as a spiritual guide and a symbol of poetic inspiration.
2818:
2749:
2726:
2650:
2618:
2563:
2408:
Milton had come to stand apart from all sects, though apparently finding the
2318:
2283:
2271:
2127:
2111:
2048:
2044:
2024:
1942:
1819:
1786:
1771:
1549:
1331:
710:
584:
563:, and he remains generally regarded "as one of the preeminent writers in the
549:
476:
468:
378:
7349:
6673:
Hobsbaum, Philip. "Meter, Rhythm and Verse Form". New York: Routledge, 1996.
4659:
When Milton met Shakespeare: poet's notes on Bard appear to have been found
2416:
meetings, Milton became so sarcastic that the man at last gave up his place.
1510:
Proposals of certain expedients for the preventing of a civil war now feared
1052:, as well as others. Milton probably visited the Florentine Academy and the
10721:
10405:
10395:
10385:
10250:
10245:
10185:
10160:
10130:
10125:
10032:
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9873:
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9283:
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8371:
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8278:
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7893:
7888:
7876:
7797:
7783:
7707:
7234:
7187:
7164:
7066:
7059:
6855:
6729:
6647:. "The Works of Thomas Gray". ed. Mitford. London: William Pickering, 1835.
6555:
6443:
6178:
5729:
5718:
Remapping Early Modern England: The Culture of Seventeenth-century Politics
5424:
5169:
5100:
4936:
4436:
3560:
3552:
3544:
3384:
3376:
3263:
3206:
3018:
2981:
2967:
2954:
2942:
2938:
2917:
2912:
2839:
2734:
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on the weight placed at the time on the classical Latin historical writers
2439:
2326:
2287:
2167:
2123:
2064:
1998:
1740:
1658:
1552:
was issued for his arrest and his writings were burnt. He re-emerged after
1483:, attacking the concept of a state-dominated church (the position known as
1268:
1236:
1219:
1173:
1141:
1097:
1045:
1025:
1021:
1013:
865:
859:
816:
799:. He was certainly at home in London in the Lent Term 1626; there he wrote
698:
667:
592:
528:
493:
489:
384:
74:
5411:
5394:
4719:
10420:
10415:
10350:
10345:
10195:
10067:
10022:
10012:
9805:
9738:
9675:
9458:
9433:
9358:
9318:
9288:
9263:
9243:
9222:
9202:
9182:
9172:
9141:
9006:
8887:
8682:
8656:
8651:
8451:
8436:
8303:
8283:
8263:
8090:
8049:
7910:
7819:
7809:
7771:
7729:
7692:
7658:
7413:
7169:
6574:
5579:
Family Politics; Or, How John Phillips Read His Uncle's Satirical Sonnets
4868:
The World Turned Upside Down: Radical Ideas During the English Revolution
4608:
4418:
3884:
3568:
3195:
3164:
3095:
3085:
3073:
2946:
2908:
2875:
2866:
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2676:
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2279:
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2187:
1938:
1843:
1815:
1812:
1807:
1748:
1713:
1484:
1450:
1209:
906:
808:
781:
762:
757:
726:
640:. According to some scholars, Milton was second in influence to none but
633:
607:
526:
Milton achieved fame and recognition during his lifetime; his celebrated
485:
481:
472:
467:(9 December 1608 – 8 November 1674) was an English poet, polemicist, and
280:
93:
5299:
4459:
4321:
3163:
endings. To this schema Milton introduced modifications, which included
2921:
is, in the view of many critics, "one of the key 'Romantic' readings of
2825:
as Milton's precursor, and saw himself as Milton's poetical son. In his
1167:
751:
Milton's first datable compositions are two psalms written at age 15 at
455:
10803:
10611:
10511:
10360:
10280:
10052:
9943:
9785:
9728:
9705:
9670:
9619:
9609:
9577:
9522:
9348:
9328:
9253:
9217:
9121:
9106:
9031:
8956:
8892:
8852:
8421:
8411:
8288:
8218:
8105:
8074:
8054:
7998:
7993:
7948:
7843:
7541:
7485:
6196:"Milton's Areopagitica and the Modern First Amendment by Vincent Blasi"
5997:
5558:(East Brunswick, NJ: Associated University Presses, 1980). pp. 71, 72.
5332:
4279:
3316: in this section. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
3238:
2950:
2884:
2847:
2642:
2621:
he was claimed as an early Whig, while the High Tory Anglican minister
2401:
2373:
2032:
1753:
1705:
1657:, London. However, sources differ as to whether the cause of death was
1589:
1442:
1318:
1189:
988:
819:
four decades later, Milton was sent home from Cambridge because of the
678:
559:
Milton is described as the "greatest English author" by his biographer
6836:. ed. Dennis Richard Danielson, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999.
6801:
6760:
8 Vols. gen. ed. Don M. Wolfe. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1959.
5866:
5498:
5428:
4770:
4524:
4210:, ed. Nicholas McDowell and Nigel Smith, Oxford University Press, 2009
4197:, ed. Nicholas McDowell and Nigel Smith, Oxford University Press, 2009
10501:
10440:
9997:
9640:
9567:
9552:
9473:
9393:
9388:
9313:
9268:
9248:
9227:
9212:
9192:
9177:
9041:
9001:
8932:
8882:
8646:
8521:
8248:
8019:
7943:
7850:
7824:
7744:
6539:
6517:
6488:
5213:, p. 154, in David Armitage, Armand Himy, Quentin Skinner (editors),
5173:
3202:
2626:
2495:
2384:
2250:
1954:
1677:
Milton and his first wife Mary Powell (1625–1652) had four children:
1558:
1548:
in May 1660, Milton, fearing for his life, went into hiding, while a
1537:
1465:
1299:
1277:
1259:
1061:
718:
714:
611:
7583:
5324:
3291:
2387:
did not necessarily preclude the salvation of the individual, while
1945:. According to Fallon, Milton's monism is most notably reflected in
1374:. Milton's pure Latin prose and evident learning exemplified in the
1012:
and then on to Paris, riding horseback, with a letter from diplomat
10776:
10355:
10092:
9685:
9650:
9624:
9604:
9557:
9368:
9323:
9207:
9111:
9101:
9066:
9036:
8857:
8333:
8059:
8029:
7988:
7983:
7749:
7724:
6902:
6741:
An Oxford Companion to the Romantic Age: British Culture, 1776–1832
6707:
Faithful Labourers: A Reception History of Paradise Lost, 1667–1970
5854:
The Battle of the Books: History and Literature in the Augustan Age
5490:
4516:
3167:
3160:
2851:
2787:
2509:
2223:
2086:, begun in 1649, Milton was already writing off the members of the
1529:
1434:
1385:
In 1654, Milton completed the second defence of the English nation
1295:
1193:
1137:
968:
964:
807:, to Charles Diodati, a friend from St Paul's. Based on remarks of
337:
332:
6898:
6773:
Pfeiffer, Robert H. "The Teaching of Hebrew in Colonial America",
5131:
To S r Henry Vane the younger. – The Poetical Works of John Milton
2933:
The Victorian age witnessed a continuation of Milton's influence.
2008:
was written in response to the Licensing Order, in November 1644.
939:
Milton continued to write poetry during this period of study; his
909:, his father's new home since the previous year. He also lived at
536:, is among history's most influential and impassioned defences of
10813:
10726:
9614:
9582:
9572:
9343:
9303:
9136:
9061:
9046:
9026:
8095:
7958:
7739:
7697:
7680:
7052:
5998:"Francis T. Palgrave, ed. (1824–1897). The Golden Treasury. 1875"
5284:
Fletcher, -Harris (1927). "Milton's Use of Biblical Quotations".
4193:
Ann Hughes, 'Milton, Areopagitica, and the Parliamentary Cause',
3774:
3411:
3156:
2575:
2567:
2409:
2267:
2219:
1697:
On 12 November 1656, Milton was married to Katherine Woodcock at
1533:
1496:
A Letter to a Friend, Concerning the Ruptures of the Commonwealth
1391:"Regii Sanguinis Clamor ad Coelum Adversus Parricidas Anglicanos"
1049:
1041:
1033:
975:
952:
831:
390:
365:
288:
5395:"Newton's Arian Epistemology and the Cosmogony of Paradise Lost"
2687:(1677) is evidence of an immediate cultural influence. In 1695,
1536:
and advocating the establishment of an authoritarian rule by an
1461:
1119:
Originally, Milton wanted to leave Naples in order to travel to
9562:
9363:
9151:
9126:
9116:
9086:
9071:
8877:
7968:
7938:
7790:
7702:
7633:
6723:
A History of the County of Oxford: Volume 5: Bullingdon Hundred
5702:
Utopian Communism and Political Thought in Early Modern England
3403:
3130:
2579:
2482:
2361:
2306:
2200:
1918:
1489:
Considerations touching the likeliest means to remove hirelings
1342:
1150:
1129:
1120:
1101:
1009:
671:
327:
6993:
6913:
4550:
http://www.british-history.ac.uk/old-new-london/vol2/pp229-245
9592:
9081:
9016:
7978:
7973:
7953:
7761:
7519:
4480:. Christ's College Cambridge. 3 February 2017. Archived from
4258:
C. Sullivan, 'Milton and the Beginning of Civil Service', in
3214:
2376:, the belief that the soul lies dormant after the body dies.
2314:
2302:
1927:
1532:
damning the English people for backsliding from the cause of
1184:
presaged further armed conflict, Milton began to write prose
1029:
971:
804:
545:
496:
260:
2356:
may allegorically reflect Milton's view of England's recent
1453:, "On His Blindness," is presumed to date from this period.
1092:, meeting English Catholics who were also guests—theologian
9587:
9011:
7963:
7531:
6810:. Vol. 4. London: Duckworth & Co. pp. 86–129.
2937:
declared him the "moral king of English literature," while
2571:
1662:
1037:
4288:. Vol. 38. London: Smith, Elder & Co. p. 32.
4142:. Vol. 1 (Online ed.). Oxford University Press.
1517:
The Ready and Easy Way to Establishing a Free Commonwealth
1335:, an explicit defence of the regicide, in response to the
1254:
In the meantime, her desertion prompted Milton to publish
9156:
9051:
7536:
5752:, Revised and Expanded Edition, Oxford University Press,
5521:
John Milton, Radical Politics, and Biblical Republicanism
5373:
The Prose Works of John Milton, Biographical introduction
3250:
2625:
lumped Milton in with other "Agents of Darkness" such as
2546:
The Glasse of God's Providence Towards His Faithfull Ones
2404:
by their denunciation of religious tolerance in England.
2067:
remarks that both Milton and Nedham, with others such as
2016:, and a gap, he wrote in 1649–54 in the aftermath of the
1834:
On 27 April 1667, Milton sold the publication rights for
1437:
are most likely. His blindness forced him to dictate his
925:, and probably acquired proficiency in Dutch soon after.
500:
7392:
5665:
Baillie, Letters and Journals, Edinburgh, 1841, II, 220.
4223:
The End of Kings: A History of Republics and Republicans
2226:; and his sympathy or curiosity was probably engaged by
1796:
Milton Dictates the Lost Paradise to His Three Daughters
1243:
In June 1642, Milton paid a visit to the manor house at
1156:
1056:
along with smaller academies in the area, including the
784:
priest, he stayed on at Cambridge where he received his
5930:
Explanatory Notes and Remarks on Milton's Paradise Lost
4278:
Stephen, Leslie (1894). "Milton, John (1608-1674)". In
3625:
The Ready and Easy Way to Establish a Free Commonwealth
3617:
The Likeliest Means to Remove Hirelings from the Church
2821:
considered Milton the major English poet. Blake placed
2317:. These views were bound up in Protestant views of the
1881:, as well as a collection of his letters and the Latin
1272:, his celebrated attack on pre-printing censorship. In
1240:
in 1644, urging a reform of the national universities.
5260:. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. p. 7.
5051:
An Approach to Political Philosophy: Locke in Contexts
4817:. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1942: 338 and
8733:
The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction
6770:
Peck, Francis. "New Memoirs of Milton". London, 1740.
6421:
Vision and resonance : two senses of poetic form
3513:
The Reason of Church-Government Urged against Prelaty
1584:. His only explicitly political tracts were the 1672
1215:
The Reason of Church-Government Urged against Prelaty
6816:
Literature in the Public Service: Divine Bureaucracy
6055:
Cited from the original in J. Paul Hunter (editor),
5632:"Milton: Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce - Notes"
5204:
Popular Republicanism in the 1650s: John Streater's
2685:
The State of Innocence and the Fall of Man: an Opera
2645:. The political ideas of Milton, Locke, Sidney, and
2493:
had included Milton's divorce tracts in his list in
1202:
Of Reformation touching Church Discipline in England
6850:
Thomas Wentworth, First Earl of Strafford 1593–1641
6839:Watts, Isaac. "Miscellaneous Thoughts" No. lxxiii.
5750:
The Great Cause: The American Revolution, 1763–1789
5105:
The Interregnum: The Quest for Settlement 1646–1660
4896:"The Conflict of Puritanism in Milton: An Analysis"
3237:. Following to Milton, English poetry from Pope to
1132:with Diodati's uncle after he returned to Rome. In
602:at the time. In his early years, Milton studied at
4363:"Milton appointed Latin Secretary | History Today"
4131:
2869:, but for the most part rejected his religiosity.
701:, London, on 9 December 1608, the son of composer
6248:"Philip Pullman opens Bodleian Milton exhibition"
2987:First Amendment to the United States Constitution
2504:Even here, though, his originality is qualified:
709:father Richard "the Ranger" Milton for embracing
11011:Deaths from kidney failure in the United Kingdom
10857:
6829:. Ed. Helen Darbishere. London: Constable, 1932.
5536:(Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1998), p. xi.
4853:A Critical History of English Literature, Vol. I
4838:(Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1991), p. 81.
3860:. New York: A.S. Barnes & Company. pp.
3110:to be an extension of his own personal liberty:
2663:
2230:: in August 1650 he licensed for publication by
1349:and his party published the defence of monarchy
1283:
10886:17th-century English dramatists and playwrights
6734:The Life of John Milton and History of His Time
6222:"Imitating Milton: The Legacy of Paradise Lost"
4692:. s6-17 (3). Oxford University Press: 250–269.
3420:Poems of Mr John Milton, Both English and Latin
2790:said "Milton remains the glory and the wonder (
2274:imagery. He knew at least four commentaries on
6832:von Maltzahn, Nicholas. "Milton's Readers" in
6424:. New York: Oxford University Press. pp.
6198:. Nationalhumanitiescenter.org. Archived from
5444:The British Journal for the History of Science
4681:
4622:The Monthly Mirror: Reflecting Men and Manners
4544:
4542:
4125:
4123:
4081:Chaney 1985 p. 244–251 and Chaney 2000 p. 313.
2609:. Very early on, though, he was championed by
2586:. A sense of history mattered greatly to him:
1761:was published in 1637, and the publication of
1200:cause. Milton's first foray into polemics was
8972:
7599:
7378:
7354:
6929:
6793:Scott, John. "Critical Essays". London, 1785.
6680:. Lewisburg: Bucknell University Press, 1980.
5287:The Journal of English and Germanic Philology
4308:POOLEY, ROGER (1993). "The poets' Cromwell".
2448:as the only effective way of achieving broad
1498:, written in October 1659, was a response to
9478:
7841:
7795:
7781:
7160:Judgement of Martin Bucer Concerning Divorce
6560:Versions of Antihumanism: Milton and Others.
6183:The Anxiety of Influence: A theory of poetry
4855:. London: Seeker & Warburg. p. 457.
4394:
3537:Judgement of Martin Bucer Concerning Divorce
2653:, whose ideology in turn was central to the
1996:Title page of John Milton's 1644 edition of
1863:, which was published alongside the tragedy
872:
834:" to him. Milton also befriended theologian
826:At Cambridge, Milton was on good terms with
11121:People educated at St Paul's School, London
9414:
6548:"Annual Lecture on a Master Mind: Milton",
6118:Letters of Blood and Other Works in English
4539:
4120:
3693:
2721:There was an early, partial translation of
2513:
2055:A friend and ally in the pamphlet wars was
1894:
1747:'s plays in 1632. An annotated copy of the
1389:in response to an anonymous Royalist tract
651:
8979:
8965:
7606:
7592:
7385:
7371:
6936:
6922:
6034:
6032:
4748:
4687:
3731:
2075:, would have taken their problem with the
49:
27:English poet and civil servant (1608–1674)
6525:The Influence of Milton on English Poetry
6417:
6224:. University of Cambridge. Archived from
5410:
5279:
5277:
5255:
4894:Khan, Abdul Hamid (July–September 2016).
4825:. New York: T. Nelson and Sons, 1941: 19.
4815:Milton and the Puritan Dilemma, 1641–1660
4449:
4426:
4206:Blair Hoxby, 'Areopagitica and Liberty',
3332:Learn how and when to remove this message
3129:(in the meter of Milton's translation of
717:. He lived in and worked from a house in
11161:Writers about activism and social change
10926:17th-century English non-fiction writers
8986:
6861:. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1983.
6743:. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001.
6709:. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013.
6505:. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008.
5476:
5441:
5283:
4757:(68). Oxford University Press: 415–427.
4502:
4219:
4129:
4072:Chaney 1985 and 2000 and Lewalski p. 96.
4063:Milton 1959 Vol. IV part I. pp. 615–617.
3942:
3868:
3274:(1875–1938). Milton also wrote the hymn
3270:was set as a large-scale choral work by
3067:
2801:
2667:
1991:
1790:
1460:
1401:, to whom Milton wrongly attributed the
1304:
1166:
927:
905:After receiving his MA, Milton moved to
677:
661:
225:
197:
30:For other people named John Milton, see
11076:Freedom of speech in the United Kingdom
11036:English male dramatists and playwrights
10981:Burials at St Giles-without-Cripplegate
10562:Reflections on the Revolution in France
6796:
6692:Lives of the Most Eminent English Poets
6562:Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012.
6068:
6029:
5825:
5800:
5769:
5435:
5312:
5143:
4850:
4277:
4139:Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
4108:Milton 1959 Vol. IV part I pp. 618–619.
3874:
3393:A Mask Presented at Ludlow Castle, 1634
2777:Lives of the Most Eminent English Poets
2595:
2432:
1524:'s march towards London to restore the
898:Lives of the Most Eminent English Poets
201:
14:
10956:Anti-Catholicism in the United Kingdom
10858:
7281:Methought I Saw my Late Espoused Saint
6718:. Oxford: Blackwells Publishers, 2003.
6635:: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (
6250:. University of Oxford. Archived from
6139:
5945:Paris: Garnier-Flammarion, 1966, p.66.
5392:
5274:
4934:
4730:from the original on 19 September 2012
4400:
4341:. Yale University Press. p. 216.
4307:
4220:Everdell, William R. (15 April 2000).
3929:
3927:
3824:
3767:
3369:On Arriving at the Age of Twenty-Three
2468:The Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce
10941:Alumni of Christ's College, Cambridge
8960:
7613:
7587:
7366:
7353:
7267:When I Consider How My Light is Spent
6917:
6493:Milton: Poet, Pamphleteer and Patriot
6160:from the original on 25 December 2022
6082:from the original on 25 December 2022
6004:from the original on 31 December 2009
5251:
5249:
4889:
4887:
4846:
4844:
4403:"On The Nature of Milton's Blindness"
4334:
3853:
3782:from the original on 30 October 2021.
3474:Arcades: a masque. (date is unknown).
3469:Poems, &c, Upon Several Occasions
3428:When I Consider How My Light is Spent
3094:was taken as a unique exemplar. Said
2348:, Milton mourns the end of the godly
1690:Deborah (2 May 1652 – 10 August 1727)
1447:When I Consider How My Light is Spent
1325:, and finally was demolished in 1877.
1157:Civil war, prose tracts, and marriage
823:, which afflicted Cambridge in 1625.
6573:
6527:. London: Kessinger Publishing. 1922
6503:John Milton: Life, Work, and Thought
5619:John Milton among the Polygamophiles
4916:from the original on 29 January 2019
4893:
4865:
3849:
3847:
3818:
3314:adding citations to reliable sources
3285:
2195:, Milton may make ironic use of the
1962:
10881:17th-century English civil servants
10672:The End of History and the Last Man
10582:Elements of the Philosophy of Right
7193:The Tenure of Kings and Magistrates
7018:On the Morning of Christ's Nativity
6617:from the original on 9 January 2023
6495:. New York: Bloomsbury Press, 2008.
6102:George Eliot's Dialogue with Milton
5873:from the original on 29 August 2019
5621:(New York: Loewenthal Press, 1974).
4813:See, for instance, Barker, Arthur.
3924:
3577:The Tenure of Kings and Magistrates
3353:On the Morning of Christ's Nativity
3344:
3268:On the Morning of Christ's Nativity
3256:was set for choir and orchestra as
3244:
1893:An unfinished religious manifesto,
1853:Milton followed up the publication
1291:The Tenure of Kings and Magistrates
674:, commemorating Milton's birthplace
532:(1644), written in condemnation of
24:
10936:17th-century Christian theologians
7155:Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce
6872:Works by John Milton in eBook form
6593:The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism
6550:Proceedings of the British Academy
6140:Leavis, F. R. (17 November 2011).
5246:
5158:10.1111/j.1094-348X.2000.tb00613.x
4993:
4955:from the original on 29 March 2024
4884:
4841:
4373:from the original on 4 August 2018
3749:from the original on 30 March 2016
3529:Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce
3063:
2985:is still cited as relevant to the
2834:
2526:Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce
2162:, because he wanted to invoke the
1877:. In 1673, Milton republished his
1540:set up by an unelected parliament.
1456:
1180:On returning to England where the
1171:Title page of the 1644 edition of
1075:— Milton's account of Florence in
736:, a Scottish Presbyterian with an
170:
25:
11187:
11176:English writers with disabilities
10906:17th-century English philosophers
10901:17th-century English male writers
7430:William Blake's illustrations of
6865:
6668:Milton and the English Revolution
5782:from the original on 10 June 2016
5772:"The World of Milton Scholarship"
5598:Milton and the English Revolution
5006:from the original on 27 July 2022
4669:, The Guardian, 16 September 2019
4580:from the original on 20 June 2021
3844:
3768:Rogers, John (21 November 2008).
2953:did not reduce Milton's stature.
2774:, and Milton was included in his
2305:nation akin to the Old Testament
1276:, Milton aligns himself with the
1234:led him to write his short tract
853:and his epitaphs on the death of
166:
11131:British philosophers of religion
10642:The Open Society and Its Enemies
8803:The Closing of the American Mind
8723:Civilization and Its Discontents
8703:A Vindication of Natural Society
7274:On the Late Massacre in Piedmont
6992:
6906:
6767:, "Paradise Lost". London, 1668.
6469:
6460:
6450:
6411:
6398:
6389:
6380:
6371:
6362:
6353:
6344:
6335:
6326:
6317:
6308:
6299:
6290:
6281:
6272:Rosen, J. "Return to Paradise".
6266:
6240:
6214:
6188:
6172:
6133:
6107:
6094:
6062:
6049:
6016:
5990:
5977:
5964:
5948:
5935:
5923:
5914:
5901:
5885:
5859:
5846:
5819:
5794:
5763:
5739:
5723:
5707:
5694:
5681:
5668:
5659:
5650:
4823:Milton in the Puritan Revolution
4570:"John Milton - Samson Agonistes"
4407:British Journal of Ophthalmology
4285:Dictionary of National Biography
4271:
4260:Literature in the Public Service
4240:from the original on 31 May 2024
3831:. New York, NY: George Dearborn.
3711:
3657:Artis logicae plenior institutio
3437:On the Late Massacre in Piedmont
3290:
3139:) were not uncommon after 1740.
2797:
2474:, which had been created by the
2397:Dictionary of National Biography
2321:, which some sects, such as the
1778:
1687:John (16 March 1651 – June 1652)
1639:Milton's statue and memorial in
1629:
1620:
1520:, in two editions, responded to
1020:. Through Scudamore, Milton met
991:", there appears to be just one
768:In 1625, Milton gained entry to
682:Portrait of Milton at age 10 in
454:
10896:17th-century English historians
9449:Family as a model for the state
7132:The Reason of Church-Government
6943:
6514:The Evolution of the Grand Tour
6059:by Mary Shelley (1996), p. 225.
5691:, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1991
5624:
5603:
5587:
5569:
5556:A Milton Encyclopedia, Volume 8
5548:
5539:
5526:
5513:
5470:
5386:
5377:
5365:
5352:
5339:
5306:
5237:
5220:
5196:
5180:
5137:
5123:
5110:
5094:
5081:
5072:
5056:
5043:
5031:
5018:
4987:
4928:
4924:– via Qurtuba University.
4859:
4828:
4807:
4789:The Morgan Library & Museum
4777:
4742:
4712:
4672:
4650:
4641:
4628:
4614:
4601:
4592:
4562:
4496:
4466:
4443:
4385:
4355:
4328:
4301:
4292:
4265:
4252:
4226:. University of Chicago Press.
4213:
4200:
4187:
4184:Lewalski 2003 pp. 181–182, 600.
4178:
4169:
4111:
4102:
4093:
4084:
4075:
4066:
4057:
4048:
4039:
4030:
4021:
4012:
4003:
3994:
3981:
3972:
3963:
3954:
3936:
3914:
3802:Contemporary Literary Criticism
3301:needs additional citations for
3266:(1848–1918), and Milton's poem
2928:
2879:, his own blank verse epic, on
2702:offered a corrected version of
2698:In 1732, the classical scholar
2472:Westminster Assembly of Divines
2383:shows how the loss of national
2035:as with Milton, republican and
1351:Defensio Regia pro Carolo Primo
1317:, was occupied successively by
959:argues for the virtuousness of
917:(like a scrapbook), now in the
350:Religious and political freedom
221:
193:
162:
11136:English political philosophers
11126:People from the City of London
11081:Literacy and society theorists
11006:Critics of the Catholic Church
10891:17th-century English educators
10799:Separation of church and state
10697:Collectivism and individualism
10652:The Origins of Totalitarianism
6834:The Oxford Companion to Milton
5615:Complete Poems and Major Prose
4636:Journal of the Society of Arts
3905:
3835:
3795:
3786:
3761:
3633:Brief Notes Upon a Late Sermon
3072:Milton is commemorated in the
1353:, written by leading humanist
1329:In October 1649, he published
1163:Milton's antiprelatical tracts
1088:, despite his dislike for the
690:, Buckinghamshire, painted by
503:'s expulsion of them from the
488:, including the temptation of
432:March 1649 – May 1660
13:
1:
11071:British free speech activists
11016:English educational theorists
10921:17th-century writers in Latin
10839:Category:Political philosophy
10712:Critique of political economy
8693:Oration on the Dignity of Man
7203:Defensio pro Populo Anglicano
6890:Works by or about John Milton
6645:Observations on English Metre
6406:Observations on English Metre
5232:Milton and the Good Old Cause
4836:Milton Among the Philosophers
4785:"John Milton's Paradise Lost"
4751:The Review of English Studies
4208:The Oxford Handbook of Milton
4195:The Oxford Handbook of Milton
3806:"Milton, John – Introduction"
3724:
3593:Defensio pro Populo Anglicano
2856:The Beautiful and the Sublime
2664:Early reception of the poetry
1912:
1708:. The marriage took place at
1502:'s recent dissolution of the
1449:," titled by a later editor,
1367:Defensio pro Populo Anglicano
1284:Secretary for Foreign Tongues
755:. One contemporary source is
416:Secretary for Foreign Tongues
11021:English Anglican theologians
10986:Calvinist and Reformed poets
10916:17th-century English writers
10737:Institutional discrimination
10732:History of political thought
9464:Negative and positive rights
8763:The Society of the Spectacle
6852:. New York: Macmillan, 1961.
6803:"New Lights on Milton"
6377:Saintsbury 1908 ii. 458–459.
5089:Commonwealth to Protectorate
5067:Commonwealth to Protectorate
4163:UK public library membership
1767:Justa Edouardo King Naufrago
1651:St Giles-without-Cripplegate
1641:St Giles-without-Cripplegate
1422:, and from 1657 by the poet
776:, where he graduated with a
692:Cornelis Janssens van Ceulen
106:St Giles-without-Cripplegate
32:John Milton (disambiguation)
7:
11046:English non-fiction writers
10747:Justification for the state
10532:Two Treatises of Government
7332:Milton: A Poem in Two Books
6905:(public domain audiobooks)
6784:. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2008.
6775:The Jewish Quarterly Review
6075:Obiter Dicta: Second Series
5256:Shawcross, John T. (2004).
4698:10.1093/library/s6-17.3.250
4009:Johnson 1826 Vol. I. p. 64.
3989:The Jewish Quarterly Review
3948:A Cambridge Alumni Database
3641:Accedence Commenced Grammar
3276:Let us with a gladsome mind
2828:Milton: A Poem in Two Books
2812:Milton: A Poem in Two Books
2768:Jonathan Richardson, senior
2691:became the first editor of
2489:The fervently Presbyterian
2174:
1684:Mary (born 25 October 1648)
1512:, written in November 1659.
1345:. A month later the exiled
951:were both commissioned for
842:in exchange for lessons in
721:at Bread Street, where the
604:Christ's College, Cambridge
116:Christ's College, Cambridge
10:
11192:
11061:Enlightenment philosophers
11001:Civil servants from London
10911:17th-century English poets
9417:Bellum omnium contra omnes
6753:. London: Macmillan, 1981.
6702:. London: Macmillan, 1978.
6579:"Milton, John (1608–1674)"
6482:
5842:– via Find Articles.
5826:Al-Zubi, Hasan A. (2007).
5805:. Lion Books. p. 15.
4866:Hill, Christopher (1984).
4763:10.1093/res/os-XVII.68.415
4133:"Milton, John (1608–1674)"
3950:. University of Cambridge.
3074:temple of British Worthies
2865:valued his exploration of
2557:
2459:
2455:
2178:
2144:. Nigel Smith writes that
1966:
1784:
1699:St Margaret's, Westminster
1160:
876:
655:
534:pre-publication censorship
29:
10834:
10684:
10453:
10101:
9834:
9714:
9633:
9545:
9536:
9402:
9236:
9165:
8994:
8941:
8845:
8833:Intellectuals and Society
8783:The Culture of Narcissism
8674:
8342:
8134:
8083:
8012:
7926:
7919:
7859:
7621:
7565:
7512:
7477:
7450:
7422:
7406:
7360:
7355:Links to related articles
7308:
7290:
7258:
7226:
7213:A Treatise of Civil Power
7178:
7145:
7107:
7001:
6990:
6951:
6827:The Early Lives of Milton
6725:. 1957. pp. 122–134.
6676:Hunter, William Bridges.
6278:, 2 June 2008, pp. 72–76.
5943:Le Siecle de Louis XIV 2,
5909:Some Versions of Pastoral
5869:. Andromeda.rutgers.edu.
5867:"Online text of one book"
5776:Virginia Quarterly Review
5554:Hunter, William Bridges.
5456:10.1017/S0007087499003751
5362:(1980), Vol. VIII, p. 13.
4664:18 September 2019 at the
4638:, 8 November 1867, p. 755
4335:Corns, Thomas N. (2012).
4298:von Maltzahn 1999 p. 239.
4130:Campbell, Gordon (2004).
4117:Lewalski 2003 pp. 99–109.
3944:"Milton, John (MLTN624J)"
3609:A Treatise of Civil Power
2900:The Madwoman in the Attic
1885:from his Cambridge days.
1734:
1672:
1480:A Treatise of Civil Power
1311:Petty France, Westminster
879:Early life of John Milton
873:Study, poetry, and travel
658:Early life of John Milton
453:
448:
444:
440:
436:
425:
415:
411:
407:
403:
373:
354:
346:
320:
301:
251:
244:
236:
141:
121:
111:
101:
82:
60:
48:
41:
10976:British writers in Latin
10622:The Revolt of the Masses
8823:The Malaise of Modernity
8773:The History of Sexuality
7872:Catholic social teaching
7321:Edward Phillips (nephew)
7122:Of Prelatical Episcopacy
6739:McCalman, Iain. et al.,
6475:Saintsbury 1908 ii. 468.
6418:Hollander, John (1975).
6341:Saintsbury 1908 ii. 457.
6296:Saintsbury 1908 ii. 443.
6126:25 December 2022 at the
5803:John Milton: A Biography
5534:The Matter of Revolution
5358:William Bridges Hunter,
5215:Milton and Republicanism
5038:Milton and Republicanism
4941:(in Korean). AMS Press.
4090:Lewalski 2003 pp. 94–98.
4054:Lewalski 2003 pp. 88–94.
4045:Lewalski 2003 pp. 87–88.
4000:Milton 1959 pp. 887–888.
3883:(1st ed.). Oxford:
3704:
3497:Of Prelatical Episcopacy
3481:
3281:
2973:The Anxiety of Influence
2649:strongly influenced the
2368:as king. Illustrated by
2309:, and shows its leader,
1888:
1846:edition priced at three
1681:Anne (born 29 July 1646)
1611:
1573:, his only extant home.
1245:Forest Hill, Oxfordshire
1224:Archbishop of Canterbury
1206:Of Prelatical Episcopacy
1192:, in the service of the
742:University of St Andrews
697:John Milton was born in
652:Early life and education
10602:The Communist Manifesto
9528:Tyranny of the majority
9439:Consent of the governed
8903:Philosophy of education
7137:Apology for Smectymnuus
6859:The Life of John Milton
6808:Studies of a Biographer
6736:, Vol. 1. Oxford: 1859.
6716:The Life of John Milton
6395:Saintsbury 1916 p. 114.
6350:Saintsbury 1916 p. 101.
6072:(1887). "John Milton".
5911:(1974 edition), p. 147.
5770:Zagorin, Perez (2002).
5687:Nicholas Von Maltzahn,
5120:(1972 edition), p. 200.
4851:Daiches, David (1960).
4647:Johnson 1826 Vol. I 86.
4574:Encyclopedia Britannica
4338:The Milton Encyclopedia
4175:Lobel 1957 pp. 122–134.
3881:John Milton A Biography
3825:Murphy, Arthur (1837).
3811:1 December 2009 at the
3770:"Paradise Lost, Book I"
3521:Apology for Smectymnuus
3230:The Castle of Indolence
2995:New York Public Library
2462:Milton's divorce tracts
1106:Giovanni Battista Manso
838:, tutoring Williams in
774:University of Cambridge
644:. In one of his books,
513:Commonwealth of England
55:Portrait of John Milton
9479:
9429:Clash of civilizations
9415:
7842:
7796:
7782:
7339:Neo-Miltonic syllabics
7326:John Phillips (nephew)
7299:De Doctrina Christiana
7242:The History of Britain
7218:The Ready and Easy Way
6670:. London: Faber, 1977.
6542:: Penguin Books, 1962.
5898:(1963), pp. 9, 14, 57.
5801:Forsyth, Neil (2008).
5611:The Christian Doctrine
5319:. xxxvi (6): 376–377.
5000:European Liberal Forum
4148:10.1093/ref:odnb/18800
3933:Dick 1962 pp. 270–275.
3875:Forsyth, Neil (2008).
3696:De Doctrina Christiana
3694:
3649:The History of Britain
3221:'s finest poems (e.g.
3149:
3116:
3081:
2842:was a theorist of the
2815:
2673:
2593:
2551:
2516:De Doctrina Christiana
2514:
2502:
2426:
2418:
2260:In his 1641 treatise,
2181:John Milton's religion
2150:
2053:
2018:execution of Charles I
2002:
1990:
1985:
1969:John Milton's politics
1897:De doctrina christiana
1895:
1802:
1563:Great Plague of London
1473:
1416:Georg Rudolph Wecklein
1326:
1208:, the two defences of
1177:
1072:
1054:Accademia della Crusca
936:
888:
830:; he later dedicated "
694:
675:
10946:Anglican philosophers
10931:17th-century scholars
9444:Divine right of kings
8908:Philosophy of history
8898:Philosophy of culture
8793:A Conflict of Visions
7109:Antiprelatical tracts
7025:Upon the Circumcision
6695:. London: Dove, 1826.
6686:. "Rambler #86" 1751.
6678:A Milton Encyclopedia
6595:. Thousand Oaks, CA:
6530:Dick, Oliver Lawson.
6146:. Faber & Faber.
6114:Printz-Påhlson, Göran
6024:A Companion to Milton
5734:Revolution Principles
5412:10.1353/elh.2019.0003
5393:Rogers, John (2019).
5360:A Milton Encyclopedia
5316:Modern Language Notes
5189:and Gordon Campbell,
4935:Milton, John (1971).
4036:Chaney 1985 and 2000.
4027:Lewalski 2003 p. 103.
3969:Wedgwood 1961 p. 178.
3857:In the Days of Milton
3854:Jenks, Tudor (1905).
3841:Masson 1859 pp. v–vi.
3792:McCalman 2001 p. 605.
3673:Epistolae Familiaries
3144:
3112:
3071:
2805:
2671:
2588:
2537:
2487:
2437:Milton called in the
2422:
2406:
2242:Rufus Wilmot Griswold
2209:Authorized King James
2146:
2029:
1995:
1986:
1976:
1794:
1464:
1308:
1256:a series of pamphlets
1170:
1086:English College, Rome
1067:
967:. He contributed his
931:
883:
877:Further information:
791:Milton may have been
681:
665:
11106:Neoclassical writers
10961:English blind people
10592:Democracy in America
9971:political philosophy
9954:political philosophy
9769:political philosophy
9598:political philosophy
9508:Separation of powers
9469:Night-watchman state
9454:Monopoly on violence
8988:Political philosophy
8913:Political philosophy
8713:Democracy in America
7316:John Milton (father)
6899:Works by John Milton
6881:Works by John Milton
6758:Complete Prose Works
6713:Lewalski, Barbara K.
6603:. pp. 331–332.
6532:Aubrey's Brief Lives
6359:Johnson 1751 no. 86.
5983:Part II, Section I:
5896:Milton's Grand Style
5577:"Nicholas McDowell,
5187:William Riley Parker
4419:10.1136/bjo.14.7.339
4367:www.historytoday.com
4099:Lewalski 2003 p. 98.
3396:, commonly known as
3310:improve this article
3259:Blest Pair of Sirens
3024:Look Homeward, Angel
2783:The Age of Louis XIV
2617:: with the regicide
2596:Legacy and influence
2433:Religious toleration
2136:Bulstrode Whitelocke
1667:John Bacon the Elder
1370:, also known as the
1204:(1641), followed by
542:freedom of the press
200:; died
169:; died
11166:Writers from London
11151:Social philosophers
11056:English theologians
11051:English republicans
10996:Christian humanists
10782:Right-wing politics
10662:A Theory of Justice
10632:The Road to Serfdom
10552:The Social Contract
9259:Christian democracy
8753:One-Dimensional Man
7494:Damnation and a Day
6501:and Corns, Thomas.
6323:Gordon 2008 p. 234.
6305:Watts 1810 iv. 619.
6202:on 14 December 2007
4870:. London: Penguin.
4634:'Milton, John', in
4598:Toland 1932 p. 193.
4555:9 July 2020 at the
4401:Sorsby, A. (1930).
3911:Lewalski 2003 p. 3.
2989:. A quotation from
2731:Johann Jakob Bodmer
2655:American Revolution
2213:Immanuel Tremellius
1745:William Shakespeare
1606:Glorious Revolution
1598:James, Duke of York
1278:parliamentary cause
1146:Francesco Barberini
1114:Giambattista Marino
642:William Shakespeare
361:English Renaissance
11141:Rhetoric theorists
11101:Mythopoeic writers
11096:Metaphor theorists
11086:Literary theorists
11041:English male poets
11026:English Dissenters
10794:Political violence
10789:Political theology
10772:Left-wing politics
10767:Political spectrum
8873:Cultural pessimism
8868:Cultural criticism
7767:National character
7525:Prince of Darkness
7461:in popular culture
7259:Individual sonnets
6780:Rosenfeld, Nancy.
6698:Le Comte, Edward.
6386:Dexter 1922 p. 59.
6368:Dexter 1922 p. 57.
6332:Dexter 1922 p. 46.
6254:on 12 January 2009
6228:on 1 February 2008
6143:The Common Pursuit
6070:Birrell, Augustine
5959:A Blake Dictionary
5852:Joseph M. Levine,
5834:on 24 January 2011
5746:Robert Middlekauff
5519:Walter S. H. Lim,
5116:Christopher Hill,
4484:on 4 February 2017
3960:Hunter 1980 p. 99.
3254:At a solemn Musick
3082:
3007:His Dark Materials
2959:The Common Pursuit
2871:William Wordsworth
2816:
2756:. For example, in
2674:
2584:History of Britain
2313:, as a latter-day
2237:Racovian Catechism
2159:Ready and Easy Way
2083:History of Britain
2003:
1803:
1775:appeared in 1667.
1582:History of Britain
1571:Chalfont St. Giles
1474:
1431:retinal detachment
1355:Claudius Salmasius
1327:
1178:
937:
923:History of Britain
803:, his first Latin
695:
676:
589:William Wordsworth
214:Elizabeth Mynshull
183:Katherine Woodcock
11031:English essayists
10853:
10852:
10847:
10846:
10757:Philosophy of law
10702:Conflict theories
10542:The Spirit of Law
10449:
10448:
9498:Original position
8954:
8953:
8670:
8669:
7815:Spontaneous order
7805:Social alienation
7654:Cultural heritage
7615:Social philosophy
7581:
7580:
7467:Paradise Regained
7347:
7346:
7083:Paradise Regained
6964:Reception history
6885:Project Gutenberg
6689:Johnson, Samuel.
6664:Hill, Christopher
6631:cite encyclopedia
6523:Dexter, Raymond.
6287:Eliot 1947 p. 63.
6153:978-0-571-28122-0
6022:Thomas N. Corns,
5892:Christopher Ricks
5425:Project MUSE
5208:heroick mechanics
5170:Project MUSE
5087:Austin Woolrych,
4233:978-0-226-22482-4
4161:(Subscription or
3745:. 19 April 2018.
3743:Poetry Foundation
3453:Paradise Regained
3342:
3341:
3334:
3080:, Buckinghamshire
2712:Christopher Ricks
2613:, and decried by
2389:Paradise Regained
2339:Paradise Regained
2323:Fifth Monarchists
2090:as incorrigible.
2057:Marchamont Nedham
1963:Political thought
1924:mind-body dualism
1860:Paradise Regained
1710:St Mary Aldermary
1470:William Faithorne
1264:Hezekiah Woodward
1108:, patron to both
1008:He first went to
934:Horton, Berkshire
688:Chalfont St Giles
666:Blue plaque on 1
627:English Civil War
538:freedom of speech
462:
461:
355:Literary movement
96:, London, England
77:, London, England
16:(Redirected from
11183:
10762:Political ethics
10752:Machiavellianism
10692:Authoritarianism
10677:
10667:
10657:
10647:
10637:
10627:
10617:
10607:
10597:
10587:
10577:
10567:
10557:
10547:
10537:
10527:
10517:
10507:
10497:
10487:
10477:
10467:
9543:
9542:
9484:
9420:
9410:Balance of power
9384:Social democracy
9379:Social Darwinism
9354:Multiculturalism
9299:Environmentalism
9274:Communitarianism
8981:
8974:
8967:
8958:
8957:
8918:Social criticism
8838:
8828:
8818:
8808:
8798:
8788:
8778:
8768:
8758:
8748:
8738:
8728:
8718:
8708:
8698:
8688:
7924:
7923:
7906:Frankfurt School
7884:Communitarianism
7847:
7801:
7787:
7608:
7601:
7594:
7585:
7584:
7502:Rattle That Lock
7387:
7380:
7373:
7364:
7363:
7351:
7350:
7249:Of True Religion
7208:Defensio Secunda
7180:Political tracts
7090:Samson Agonistes
6996:
6938:
6931:
6924:
6915:
6914:
6910:
6909:
6894:Internet Archive
6814:Sullivan, Ceri.
6811:
6805:
6726:
6640:
6634:
6626:
6624:
6622:
6520:, London, 2000).
6508:Chaney, Edward,
6499:Campbell, Gordon
6476:
6473:
6467:
6464:
6458:
6454:
6448:
6447:
6415:
6409:
6402:
6396:
6393:
6387:
6384:
6378:
6375:
6369:
6366:
6360:
6357:
6351:
6348:
6342:
6339:
6333:
6330:
6324:
6321:
6315:
6312:
6306:
6303:
6297:
6294:
6288:
6285:
6279:
6270:
6264:
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6237:
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6233:
6218:
6212:
6211:
6209:
6207:
6192:
6186:
6176:
6170:
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6167:
6165:
6137:
6131:
6111:
6105:
6098:
6092:
6091:
6089:
6087:
6066:
6060:
6053:
6047:
6036:
6027:
6020:
6014:
6013:
6011:
6009:
6000:. Bartleby.com.
5994:
5988:
5981:
5975:
5968:
5962:
5952:
5946:
5939:
5933:
5927:
5921:
5918:
5912:
5907:William Empson,
5905:
5899:
5889:
5883:
5882:
5880:
5878:
5863:
5857:
5850:
5844:
5843:
5841:
5839:
5830:. Archived from
5823:
5817:
5816:
5798:
5792:
5791:
5789:
5787:
5767:
5761:
5743:
5737:
5727:
5721:
5711:
5705:
5700:Timothy Kenyon,
5698:
5692:
5685:
5679:
5672:
5666:
5663:
5657:
5654:
5648:
5647:
5645:
5643:
5634:. Archived from
5628:
5622:
5607:
5601:
5594:Christopher Hill
5591:
5585:
5584:
5573:
5567:
5552:
5546:
5543:
5537:
5530:
5524:
5517:
5511:
5510:
5474:
5468:
5467:
5439:
5433:
5432:
5414:
5390:
5384:
5381:
5375:
5369:
5363:
5356:
5350:
5343:
5337:
5336:
5310:
5304:
5303:
5281:
5272:
5271:
5253:
5244:
5241:
5235:
5230:(2007), Ch. 14,
5224:
5218:
5211:
5207:
5200:
5194:
5184:
5178:
5177:
5146:Milton Quarterly
5141:
5135:
5134:
5127:
5121:
5118:God's Englishman
5114:
5108:
5098:
5092:
5085:
5079:
5076:
5070:
5060:
5054:
5047:
5041:
5035:
5029:
5022:
5016:
5015:
5013:
5011:
4991:
4985:
4984:
4978:
4974:
4972:
4964:
4962:
4960:
4932:
4926:
4925:
4923:
4921:
4915:
4900:
4891:
4882:
4881:
4863:
4857:
4856:
4848:
4839:
4834:Stephen Fallon,
4832:
4826:
4821:; Wolfe, Don M.
4811:
4805:
4804:
4802:
4800:
4791:. Archived from
4781:
4775:
4774:
4746:
4740:
4739:
4737:
4735:
4716:
4710:
4709:
4685:
4679:
4676:
4670:
4654:
4648:
4645:
4639:
4632:
4626:
4625:
4618:
4612:
4605:
4599:
4596:
4590:
4589:
4587:
4585:
4566:
4560:
4546:
4537:
4536:
4500:
4494:
4493:
4491:
4489:
4474:"Milton's Works"
4470:
4464:
4463:
4454:. 48/49: 32–55.
4447:
4441:
4440:
4430:
4398:
4392:
4389:
4383:
4382:
4380:
4378:
4359:
4353:
4352:
4332:
4326:
4325:
4305:
4299:
4296:
4290:
4289:
4275:
4274:
4269:
4263:
4256:
4250:
4249:
4247:
4245:
4217:
4211:
4204:
4198:
4191:
4185:
4182:
4176:
4173:
4167:
4166:
4158:
4156:
4154:
4135:
4127:
4118:
4115:
4109:
4106:
4100:
4097:
4091:
4088:
4082:
4079:
4073:
4070:
4064:
4061:
4055:
4052:
4046:
4043:
4037:
4034:
4028:
4025:
4019:
4018:Hill 1977 p. 38.
4016:
4010:
4007:
4001:
3998:
3992:
3985:
3979:
3978:Hill 1977 p. 34.
3976:
3970:
3967:
3961:
3958:
3952:
3951:
3940:
3934:
3931:
3922:
3918:
3912:
3909:
3903:
3902:
3872:
3866:
3865:
3851:
3842:
3839:
3833:
3832:
3822:
3816:
3799:
3793:
3790:
3784:
3783:
3765:
3759:
3758:
3756:
3754:
3735:
3718:
3715:
3699:
3665:Of True Religion
3601:Defensio Secunda
3461:Samson Agonistes
3345:Poetry and drama
3337:
3330:
3326:
3323:
3317:
3294:
3286:
3245:Musical settings
3184:Oliver Goldsmith
3178:or slighting of
3084:Milton's use of
3054:Darkness Visible
3044:Darkness at Noon
2780:(1779–1781). In
2647:James Harrington
2549:
2519:
2446:disestablishment
2345:Samson Agonistes
2154:Richard Cromwell
2141:Defensio Secunda
2073:James Harrington
1900:
1866:Samson Agonistes
1857:with its sequel
1800:Eugène Delacroix
1633:
1624:
1586:Of True Religion
1567:Milton's Cottage
1554:a general pardon
1387:Defensio secunda
1359:Council of State
1134:Defensio Secunda
1125:Defensio Secunda
1090:Society of Jesus
1079:
1077:Defensio Secunda
1003:Barbara Lewalski
998:Defensio Secunda
915:commonplace book
901:
813:Christopher Hill
797:William Chappell
788:on 3 July 1632.
770:Christ's College
746:St Paul's School
684:Milton's Cottage
565:English language
554:English language
519:and later under
517:Council of State
458:
430:
420:Council of State
397:Samson Agonistes
229:
227:
223:
205:
203:
199:
195:
174:
172:
168:
164:
89:
70:
68:
53:
39:
38:
21:
11191:
11190:
11186:
11185:
11184:
11182:
11181:
11180:
11171:Blind educators
11111:Neo-Latin poets
10991:Christian poets
10856:
10855:
10854:
10849:
10848:
10843:
10830:
10819:Totalitarianism
10680:
10675:
10665:
10655:
10645:
10635:
10625:
10615:
10605:
10595:
10585:
10575:
10565:
10555:
10545:
10535:
10525:
10515:
10505:
10495:
10492:Treatise on Law
10485:
10475:
10465:
10445:
10103:
10097:
9836:
9830:
9716:
9710:
9629:
9532:
9518:State of nature
9513:Social contract
9493:Ordered liberty
9481:Noblesse oblige
9398:
9232:
9161:
8990:
8985:
8955:
8950:
8937:
8863:Critical theory
8841:
8836:
8826:
8816:
8806:
8796:
8786:
8776:
8766:
8756:
8746:
8736:
8726:
8716:
8706:
8696:
8686:
8666:
8344:
8338:
8136:
8130:
8079:
8008:
7915:
7867:Budapest School
7855:
7644:Cosmopolitanism
7617:
7612:
7582:
7577:
7561:
7508:
7473:
7446:
7418:
7402:
7391:
7356:
7348:
7343:
7304:
7286:
7254:
7222:
7174:
7141:
7103:
6997:
6988:
6947:
6942:
6907:
6876:Standard Ebooks
6868:
6847:Wedgwood, C. V.
6798:Stephen, Leslie
6721:
6705:Leonard, John.
6684:Johnson, Samuel
6628:
6627:
6620:
6618:
6611:
6485:
6480:
6479:
6474:
6470:
6465:
6461:
6455:
6451:
6436:
6416:
6412:
6403:
6399:
6394:
6390:
6385:
6381:
6376:
6372:
6367:
6363:
6358:
6354:
6349:
6345:
6340:
6336:
6331:
6327:
6322:
6318:
6314:Milton 1668 xi.
6313:
6309:
6304:
6300:
6295:
6291:
6286:
6282:
6271:
6267:
6257:
6255:
6246:
6245:
6241:
6231:
6229:
6220:
6219:
6215:
6205:
6203:
6194:
6193:
6189:
6177:
6173:
6163:
6161:
6154:
6138:
6134:
6128:Wayback Machine
6112:
6108:
6100:Nardo, Anna K.
6099:
6095:
6085:
6083:
6067:
6063:
6054:
6050:
6037:
6030:
6026:(2003), p. 474.
6021:
6017:
6007:
6005:
5996:
5995:
5991:
5985:Adelaide.edu.au
5982:
5978:
5969:
5965:
5961:(1973), p. 274.
5955:S. Foster Damon
5953:
5949:
5940:
5936:
5928:
5924:
5919:
5915:
5906:
5902:
5890:
5886:
5876:
5874:
5865:
5864:
5860:
5856:(1994), p. 247.
5851:
5847:
5837:
5835:
5824:
5820:
5813:
5799:
5795:
5785:
5783:
5768:
5764:
5760:, pp. 51, 136ff
5744:
5740:
5728:
5724:
5712:
5708:
5699:
5695:
5686:
5682:
5673:
5669:
5664:
5660:
5655:
5651:
5641:
5639:
5630:
5629:
5625:
5608:
5604:
5600:(1977), p. 127.
5592:
5588:
5575:
5574:
5570:
5553:
5549:
5544:
5540:
5531:
5527:
5523:(2006), p. 141.
5518:
5514:
5475:
5471:
5440:
5436:
5391:
5387:
5382:
5378:
5370:
5366:
5357:
5353:
5344:
5340:
5325:10.2307/2914990
5311:
5307:
5282:
5275:
5268:
5254:
5247:
5242:
5238:
5225:
5221:
5209:
5205:
5201:
5197:
5193:(1996), p. 444.
5185:
5181:
5142:
5138:
5129:
5128:
5124:
5115:
5111:
5099:
5095:
5091:(1982), p. 101.
5086:
5082:
5077:
5073:
5063:Austin Woolrych
5061:
5057:
5053:(1993), p. 301.
5048:
5044:
5036:
5032:
5028:(2007), p. 154.
5023:
5019:
5009:
5007:
4992:
4988:
4976:
4975:
4966:
4965:
4958:
4956:
4949:
4933:
4929:
4919:
4917:
4913:
4898:
4892:
4885:
4878:
4864:
4860:
4849:
4842:
4833:
4829:
4812:
4808:
4798:
4796:
4795:on 21 July 2011
4783:
4782:
4778:
4747:
4743:
4733:
4731:
4718:
4717:
4713:
4686:
4682:
4677:
4673:
4666:Wayback Machine
4656:Flood, Alison,
4655:
4651:
4646:
4642:
4633:
4629:
4620:
4619:
4615:
4606:
4602:
4597:
4593:
4583:
4581:
4568:
4567:
4563:
4557:Wayback Machine
4547:
4540:
4501:
4497:
4487:
4485:
4472:
4471:
4467:
4448:
4444:
4399:
4395:
4390:
4386:
4376:
4374:
4361:
4360:
4356:
4349:
4333:
4329:
4310:Critical Survey
4306:
4302:
4297:
4293:
4272:
4270:
4266:
4257:
4253:
4243:
4241:
4234:
4218:
4214:
4205:
4201:
4192:
4188:
4183:
4179:
4174:
4170:
4160:
4152:
4150:
4128:
4121:
4116:
4112:
4107:
4103:
4098:
4094:
4089:
4085:
4080:
4076:
4071:
4067:
4062:
4058:
4053:
4049:
4044:
4040:
4035:
4031:
4026:
4022:
4017:
4013:
4008:
4004:
3999:
3995:
3986:
3982:
3977:
3973:
3968:
3964:
3959:
3955:
3941:
3937:
3932:
3925:
3919:
3915:
3910:
3906:
3899:
3873:
3869:
3852:
3845:
3840:
3836:
3823:
3819:
3813:Wayback Machine
3800:
3796:
3791:
3787:
3766:
3762:
3752:
3750:
3737:
3736:
3732:
3727:
3722:
3721:
3716:
3712:
3707:
3484:
3347:
3338:
3327:
3321:
3318:
3307:
3295:
3284:
3247:
3192:Scott of Amwell
3188:Henry Pemberton
3066:
3064:Literary legacy
3049:William Golding
3039:Arthur Koestler
3034:Eyeless in Gaza
2931:
2837:
2835:Romantic theory
2800:
2794:) of England."
2725:into German by
2700:Richard Bentley
2666:
2639:Algernon Sidney
2631:George Buchanan
2598:
2560:
2550:
2544:
2476:Long Parliament
2464:
2458:
2435:
2358:Fall from Grace
2311:Oliver Cromwell
2292:Andreus Rivetus
2183:
2177:
2108:John Hutchinson
2095:Oliver Cromwell
2088:Long Parliament
2077:Rump Parliament
2061:Austin Woolrych
1971:
1965:
1934:as well as the
1915:
1891:
1798:, ca. 1826, by
1789:
1783:
1737:
1718:Edward Phillips
1675:
1647:
1646:
1645:
1644:
1636:
1635:
1634:
1626:
1625:
1614:
1526:Long Parliament
1504:Rump Parliament
1500:General Lambert
1459:
1457:The Restoration
1411:Defensio pro se
1407:Peter du Moulin
1399:Alexander Morus
1395:Oliver Cromwell
1323:William Hazlitt
1286:
1165:
1159:
1081:
1074:
995:: Milton's own
981:Trinity College
919:British Library
903:
890:
881:
875:
753:Long Bennington
660:
654:
521:Oliver Cromwell
431:
426:
417:
394:
388:
382:
342:
232:
231:
219:
215:
207:
191:
187:
184:
176:
160:
156:
153:
137:
112:Alma mater
97:
91:
87:
86:8 November 1674
78:
72:
71:9 December 1608
66:
64:
56:
44:
35:
28:
23:
22:
15:
12:
11:
5:
11189:
11179:
11178:
11173:
11168:
11163:
11158:
11153:
11148:
11143:
11138:
11133:
11128:
11123:
11118:
11113:
11108:
11103:
11098:
11093:
11091:Male essayists
11088:
11083:
11078:
11073:
11068:
11063:
11058:
11053:
11048:
11043:
11038:
11033:
11028:
11023:
11018:
11013:
11008:
11003:
10998:
10993:
10988:
10983:
10978:
10973:
10968:
10963:
10958:
10953:
10951:Anglican poets
10948:
10943:
10938:
10933:
10928:
10923:
10918:
10913:
10908:
10903:
10898:
10893:
10888:
10883:
10878:
10873:
10868:
10851:
10850:
10845:
10844:
10842:
10841:
10835:
10832:
10831:
10829:
10828:
10821:
10816:
10811:
10809:Social justice
10806:
10801:
10796:
10791:
10786:
10785:
10784:
10779:
10774:
10764:
10759:
10754:
10749:
10744:
10739:
10734:
10729:
10724:
10719:
10717:Egalitarianism
10714:
10709:
10707:Contractualism
10704:
10699:
10694:
10688:
10686:
10682:
10681:
10679:
10678:
10668:
10658:
10648:
10638:
10628:
10618:
10608:
10598:
10588:
10578:
10568:
10558:
10548:
10538:
10528:
10518:
10508:
10498:
10488:
10478:
10468:
10457:
10455:
10451:
10450:
10447:
10446:
10444:
10443:
10438:
10433:
10428:
10423:
10418:
10413:
10408:
10403:
10398:
10393:
10388:
10383:
10378:
10373:
10368:
10363:
10358:
10353:
10348:
10343:
10338:
10333:
10328:
10323:
10318:
10313:
10308:
10303:
10298:
10293:
10288:
10283:
10278:
10273:
10268:
10263:
10258:
10253:
10248:
10243:
10238:
10233:
10228:
10223:
10218:
10213:
10208:
10203:
10198:
10193:
10188:
10183:
10178:
10173:
10168:
10163:
10158:
10153:
10148:
10143:
10138:
10133:
10128:
10123:
10118:
10113:
10107:
10105:
10099:
10098:
10096:
10095:
10090:
10085:
10080:
10075:
10070:
10065:
10060:
10055:
10050:
10045:
10040:
10035:
10030:
10025:
10020:
10015:
10010:
10005:
10000:
9995:
9990:
9985:
9980:
9975:
9974:
9973:
9963:
9958:
9957:
9956:
9946:
9941:
9936:
9931:
9926:
9921:
9916:
9911:
9906:
9901:
9896:
9891:
9886:
9881:
9876:
9871:
9866:
9861:
9856:
9851:
9846:
9840:
9838:
9832:
9831:
9829:
9828:
9823:
9818:
9813:
9808:
9803:
9798:
9793:
9788:
9783:
9778:
9773:
9772:
9771:
9761:
9756:
9751:
9746:
9741:
9736:
9731:
9726:
9720:
9718:
9712:
9711:
9709:
9708:
9703:
9698:
9693:
9688:
9683:
9678:
9673:
9668:
9663:
9658:
9653:
9648:
9643:
9637:
9635:
9631:
9630:
9628:
9627:
9622:
9617:
9612:
9607:
9602:
9601:
9600:
9590:
9585:
9580:
9575:
9570:
9565:
9560:
9555:
9549:
9547:
9540:
9534:
9533:
9531:
9530:
9525:
9520:
9515:
9510:
9505:
9503:Overton window
9500:
9495:
9490:
9485:
9476:
9471:
9466:
9461:
9456:
9451:
9446:
9441:
9436:
9431:
9426:
9421:
9412:
9406:
9404:
9400:
9399:
9397:
9396:
9391:
9386:
9381:
9376:
9371:
9366:
9361:
9356:
9351:
9346:
9341:
9336:
9334:Libertarianism
9331:
9326:
9321:
9316:
9311:
9306:
9301:
9296:
9291:
9286:
9281:
9276:
9271:
9266:
9261:
9256:
9251:
9246:
9240:
9238:
9234:
9233:
9231:
9230:
9225:
9220:
9215:
9210:
9205:
9200:
9195:
9190:
9185:
9180:
9175:
9169:
9167:
9163:
9162:
9160:
9159:
9154:
9149:
9144:
9139:
9134:
9129:
9124:
9119:
9114:
9109:
9104:
9099:
9094:
9089:
9084:
9079:
9074:
9069:
9064:
9059:
9054:
9049:
9044:
9039:
9034:
9029:
9024:
9019:
9014:
9009:
9004:
8998:
8996:
8992:
8991:
8984:
8983:
8976:
8969:
8961:
8952:
8951:
8949:
8948:
8942:
8939:
8938:
8936:
8935:
8930:
8925:
8923:Social science
8920:
8915:
8910:
8905:
8900:
8895:
8890:
8885:
8880:
8875:
8870:
8865:
8860:
8855:
8849:
8847:
8843:
8842:
8840:
8839:
8829:
8819:
8813:Gender Trouble
8809:
8799:
8789:
8779:
8769:
8759:
8749:
8743:The Second Sex
8739:
8729:
8719:
8709:
8699:
8689:
8678:
8676:
8672:
8671:
8668:
8667:
8665:
8664:
8659:
8654:
8649:
8644:
8639:
8634:
8629:
8624:
8619:
8614:
8609:
8604:
8599:
8594:
8589:
8584:
8579:
8574:
8569:
8564:
8559:
8554:
8549:
8544:
8539:
8534:
8529:
8524:
8519:
8514:
8509:
8504:
8499:
8494:
8489:
8484:
8479:
8474:
8469:
8464:
8459:
8454:
8449:
8444:
8439:
8434:
8429:
8424:
8419:
8414:
8409:
8404:
8399:
8394:
8389:
8384:
8379:
8374:
8369:
8364:
8359:
8354:
8348:
8346:
8340:
8339:
8337:
8336:
8331:
8326:
8321:
8316:
8311:
8306:
8301:
8296:
8291:
8286:
8281:
8276:
8271:
8266:
8261:
8256:
8251:
8246:
8241:
8236:
8231:
8226:
8221:
8216:
8211:
8206:
8201:
8196:
8191:
8186:
8181:
8176:
8171:
8166:
8161:
8156:
8151:
8146:
8140:
8138:
8132:
8131:
8129:
8128:
8123:
8118:
8113:
8108:
8103:
8098:
8093:
8087:
8085:
8081:
8080:
8078:
8077:
8072:
8067:
8062:
8057:
8052:
8047:
8042:
8037:
8032:
8027:
8022:
8016:
8014:
8010:
8009:
8007:
8006:
8001:
7996:
7991:
7986:
7981:
7976:
7971:
7966:
7961:
7956:
7951:
7946:
7941:
7936:
7930:
7928:
7921:
7917:
7916:
7914:
7913:
7908:
7903:
7902:
7901:
7891:
7886:
7881:
7880:
7879:
7869:
7863:
7861:
7857:
7856:
7854:
7853:
7848:
7839:
7838:
7837:
7827:
7822:
7817:
7812:
7807:
7802:
7793:
7788:
7779:
7774:
7769:
7764:
7759:
7758:
7757:
7747:
7742:
7737:
7735:Invisible hand
7732:
7727:
7722:
7721:
7720:
7710:
7705:
7700:
7695:
7690:
7689:
7688:
7678:
7677:
7676:
7671:
7666:
7656:
7651:
7646:
7641:
7636:
7631:
7625:
7623:
7619:
7618:
7611:
7610:
7603:
7596:
7588:
7579:
7578:
7576:
7575:
7569:
7567:
7563:
7562:
7560:
7559:
7554:
7549:
7547:God the Father
7544:
7539:
7534:
7529:
7528:
7527:
7516:
7514:
7510:
7509:
7507:
7506:
7498:
7490:
7481:
7479:
7475:
7474:
7472:
7471:
7463:
7454:
7452:
7448:
7447:
7445:
7444:
7436:
7426:
7424:
7420:
7419:
7417:
7416:
7410:
7408:
7404:
7403:
7390:
7389:
7382:
7375:
7367:
7361:
7358:
7357:
7345:
7344:
7342:
7341:
7336:
7328:
7323:
7318:
7312:
7310:
7306:
7305:
7303:
7302:
7294:
7292:
7288:
7287:
7285:
7284:
7277:
7270:
7262:
7260:
7256:
7255:
7253:
7252:
7245:
7238:
7230:
7228:
7227:Other writings
7224:
7223:
7221:
7220:
7215:
7210:
7205:
7200:
7195:
7190:
7184:
7182:
7176:
7175:
7173:
7172:
7167:
7162:
7157:
7151:
7149:
7147:Divorce tracts
7143:
7142:
7140:
7139:
7134:
7129:
7127:Animadversions
7124:
7119:
7117:Of Reformation
7113:
7111:
7105:
7104:
7102:
7101:
7093:
7086:
7079:
7072:
7071:
7070:
7063:
7056:
7049:
7042:
7035:
7028:
7021:
7005:
7003:
6999:
6998:
6991:
6989:
6987:
6986:
6981:
6976:
6971:
6966:
6961:
6955:
6953:
6949:
6948:
6941:
6940:
6933:
6926:
6918:
6912:
6911:
6896:
6887:
6878:
6867:
6866:External links
6864:
6863:
6862:
6853:
6844:
6837:
6830:
6823:Life of Milton
6821:Toland, John.
6819:
6812:
6794:
6791:
6788:
6785:
6778:
6771:
6768:
6763:Milton, John.
6761:
6756:Milton, John.
6754:
6747:Milner, Andrew
6744:
6737:
6727:
6719:
6710:
6703:
6700:Milton and Sex
6696:
6687:
6681:
6674:
6671:
6661:
6648:
6643:Gray, Thomas.
6641:
6610:978-1412965804
6609:
6601:Cato Institute
6583:Hamowy, Ronald
6571:
6568:978-1107003057
6553:
6543:
6528:
6521:
6506:
6496:
6484:
6481:
6478:
6477:
6468:
6466:Scott 1785 63.
6459:
6449:
6434:
6410:
6397:
6388:
6379:
6370:
6361:
6352:
6343:
6334:
6325:
6316:
6307:
6298:
6289:
6280:
6275:The New Yorker
6265:
6239:
6213:
6187:
6185:(1997), p. 33.
6171:
6152:
6132:
6106:
6093:
6061:
6048:
6028:
6015:
5989:
5976:
5974:(2001), p. 63.
5972:Sticky Sublime
5970:Bill Beckley,
5963:
5947:
5934:
5922:
5913:
5900:
5884:
5858:
5845:
5818:
5812:978-0745953106
5811:
5793:
5762:
5758:978-0195315882
5738:
5736:(1977), p. 77.
5722:
5706:
5704:(1989), p. 34.
5693:
5680:
5676:Life of Milton
5667:
5658:
5649:
5638:on 4 July 2013
5623:
5602:
5586:
5568:
5547:
5538:
5525:
5512:
5491:10.2307/458943
5485:(1): 151–164.
5469:
5450:(4): 381–419.
5434:
5385:
5376:
5364:
5351:
5347:Life of Milton
5338:
5305:
5294:(2): 145–165.
5273:
5267:978-0813122915
5266:
5245:
5236:
5226:Blair Worden,
5219:
5195:
5179:
5136:
5122:
5109:
5107:(1972), p. 17.
5093:
5080:
5078:Worden p. 149.
5071:
5069:(1982), p. 34.
5055:
5042:
5030:
5024:Blair Worden,
5017:
4994:Pepine, Mara.
4986:
4977:|website=
4947:
4927:
4883:
4877:978-0140137323
4876:
4858:
4840:
4827:
4806:
4776:
4741:
4722:MeasuringWorth
4711:
4680:
4671:
4649:
4640:
4627:
4613:
4600:
4591:
4561:
4538:
4517:10.2307/460581
4511:(3): 191–202.
4495:
4478:Milton's Works
4465:
4442:
4413:(7): 339–354.
4393:
4384:
4354:
4348:978-0300094442
4347:
4327:
4316:(3): 223–234.
4300:
4291:
4264:
4262:(2013), Ch. 2.
4251:
4232:
4212:
4199:
4186:
4177:
4168:
4119:
4110:
4101:
4092:
4083:
4074:
4065:
4056:
4047:
4038:
4029:
4020:
4011:
4002:
3993:
3980:
3971:
3962:
3953:
3935:
3923:
3913:
3904:
3898:978-0745953106
3897:
3867:
3843:
3834:
3817:
3794:
3785:
3760:
3729:
3728:
3726:
3723:
3720:
3719:
3709:
3708:
3706:
3703:
3702:
3701:
3691:
3685:
3677:
3669:
3661:
3653:
3645:
3637:
3629:
3621:
3613:
3605:
3597:
3589:
3581:
3573:
3565:
3557:
3549:
3541:
3533:
3525:
3517:
3509:
3505:Animadversions
3501:
3493:
3489:Of Reformation
3483:
3480:
3479:
3478:
3475:
3472:
3464:
3456:
3448:
3440:
3432:
3423:
3415:
3407:
3388:
3380:
3372:
3364:
3361:On Shakespeare
3356:
3346:
3343:
3340:
3339:
3298:
3296:
3289:
3283:
3280:
3246:
3243:
3153:Samuel Johnson
3126:Ode to Evening
3101:heroic couplet
3065:
3062:
3002:Philip Pullman
2935:Thomas Carlyle
2930:
2927:
2905:Sandra Gilbert
2863:Romantic poets
2836:
2833:
2823:Edmund Spenser
2799:
2796:
2754:Samuel Johnson
2746:Joseph Addison
2742:Alexander Pope
2716:William Empson
2708:Zachary Pearce
2665:
2662:
2635:Richard Baxter
2623:Luke Milbourne
2597:
2594:
2559:
2556:
2548:, 1644, p. 54.
2542:
2533:Herbert Palmer
2506:Thomas Gataker
2460:Main article:
2457:
2454:
2434:
2431:
2354:Garden of Eden
2263:Of Reformation
2232:William Dugard
2179:Main article:
2176:
2173:
2164:Good Old Cause
2132:Edmund Whalley
2120:Robert Overton
2100:Sir Henry Vane
2069:Andrew Marvell
1967:Main article:
1964:
1961:
1914:
1911:
1903:Henry Robinson
1890:
1887:
1875:Andrew Marvell
1840:Samuel Simmons
1829:Good Old Cause
1785:Main article:
1782:
1777:
1736:
1733:
1692:
1691:
1688:
1685:
1682:
1674:
1671:
1643:church, London
1638:
1637:
1628:
1627:
1619:
1618:
1617:
1616:
1615:
1613:
1610:
1588:, arguing for
1542:
1541:
1513:
1507:
1487:), as well as
1458:
1455:
1424:Andrew Marvell
1420:Philip Meadows
1338:Eikon Basilike
1315:Jeremy Bentham
1285:
1282:
1232:Samuel Hartlib
1161:Main article:
1158:
1155:
1110:Torquato Tasso
1066:
1044:who was under
1032:, and then to
1018:John Scudamore
1016:to ambassador
993:primary source
893:Samuel Johnson
882:
874:
871:
836:Roger Williams
723:Mermaid Tavern
656:Main article:
653:
650:
646:Samuel Johnson
638:Joseph Addison
600:Stuart England
573:Samuel Johnson
561:William Hayley
505:Garden of Eden
460:
459:
451:
450:
446:
445:
442:
441:
438:
437:
434:
433:
423:
422:
413:
412:
409:
408:
405:
404:
401:
400:
375:
371:
370:
369:
368:
363:
356:
352:
351:
348:
344:
343:
341:
340:
335:
330:
324:
322:
318:
317:
316:
315:
310:
303:
299:
298:
297:
296:
291:
286:
283:
278:
275:
272:
269:
266:
263:
258:
253:
249:
248:
246:Writing career
242:
241:
238:
234:
233:
217:
213:
212:
211:
210:
189:
185:
182:
181:
180:
179:
158:
154:
151:
150:
149:
148:
145:
143:
139:
138:
136:
135:
132:
129:
125:
123:
119:
118:
113:
109:
108:
103:
99:
98:
92:
90:(aged 65)
84:
80:
79:
73:
62:
58:
57:
54:
46:
45:
42:
26:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
11188:
11177:
11174:
11172:
11169:
11167:
11164:
11162:
11159:
11157:
11154:
11152:
11149:
11147:
11144:
11142:
11139:
11137:
11134:
11132:
11129:
11127:
11124:
11122:
11119:
11117:
11114:
11112:
11109:
11107:
11104:
11102:
11099:
11097:
11094:
11092:
11089:
11087:
11084:
11082:
11079:
11077:
11074:
11072:
11069:
11067:
11064:
11062:
11059:
11057:
11054:
11052:
11049:
11047:
11044:
11042:
11039:
11037:
11034:
11032:
11029:
11027:
11024:
11022:
11019:
11017:
11014:
11012:
11009:
11007:
11004:
11002:
10999:
10997:
10994:
10992:
10989:
10987:
10984:
10982:
10979:
10977:
10974:
10972:
10971:Blind writers
10969:
10967:
10964:
10962:
10959:
10957:
10954:
10952:
10949:
10947:
10944:
10942:
10939:
10937:
10934:
10932:
10929:
10927:
10924:
10922:
10919:
10917:
10914:
10912:
10909:
10907:
10904:
10902:
10899:
10897:
10894:
10892:
10889:
10887:
10884:
10882:
10879:
10877:
10874:
10872:
10869:
10867:
10864:
10863:
10861:
10840:
10837:
10836:
10833:
10827:
10826:
10822:
10820:
10817:
10815:
10812:
10810:
10807:
10805:
10802:
10800:
10797:
10795:
10792:
10790:
10787:
10783:
10780:
10778:
10775:
10773:
10770:
10769:
10768:
10765:
10763:
10760:
10758:
10755:
10753:
10750:
10748:
10745:
10743:
10742:Jurisprudence
10740:
10738:
10735:
10733:
10730:
10728:
10725:
10723:
10720:
10718:
10715:
10713:
10710:
10708:
10705:
10703:
10700:
10698:
10695:
10693:
10690:
10689:
10687:
10683:
10674:
10673:
10669:
10664:
10663:
10659:
10654:
10653:
10649:
10644:
10643:
10639:
10634:
10633:
10629:
10624:
10623:
10619:
10614:
10613:
10609:
10604:
10603:
10599:
10594:
10593:
10589:
10584:
10583:
10579:
10574:
10573:
10572:Rights of Man
10569:
10564:
10563:
10559:
10554:
10553:
10549:
10544:
10543:
10539:
10534:
10533:
10529:
10524:
10523:
10519:
10514:
10513:
10509:
10504:
10503:
10499:
10494:
10493:
10489:
10484:
10483:
10482:De re publica
10479:
10474:
10473:
10469:
10464:
10463:
10459:
10458:
10456:
10452:
10442:
10439:
10437:
10434:
10432:
10429:
10427:
10424:
10422:
10419:
10417:
10414:
10412:
10409:
10407:
10404:
10402:
10399:
10397:
10394:
10392:
10389:
10387:
10384:
10382:
10379:
10377:
10374:
10372:
10369:
10367:
10364:
10362:
10359:
10357:
10354:
10352:
10349:
10347:
10344:
10342:
10339:
10337:
10334:
10332:
10329:
10327:
10324:
10322:
10319:
10317:
10314:
10312:
10309:
10307:
10304:
10302:
10299:
10297:
10294:
10292:
10289:
10287:
10284:
10282:
10279:
10277:
10274:
10272:
10269:
10267:
10264:
10262:
10259:
10257:
10254:
10252:
10249:
10247:
10244:
10242:
10239:
10237:
10234:
10232:
10229:
10227:
10224:
10222:
10219:
10217:
10214:
10212:
10209:
10207:
10204:
10202:
10199:
10197:
10194:
10192:
10189:
10187:
10184:
10182:
10179:
10177:
10174:
10172:
10169:
10167:
10164:
10162:
10159:
10157:
10154:
10152:
10149:
10147:
10144:
10142:
10139:
10137:
10134:
10132:
10129:
10127:
10124:
10122:
10119:
10117:
10114:
10112:
10109:
10108:
10106:
10102:20th and 21st
10100:
10094:
10091:
10089:
10086:
10084:
10081:
10079:
10076:
10074:
10071:
10069:
10066:
10064:
10061:
10059:
10056:
10054:
10051:
10049:
10046:
10044:
10041:
10039:
10036:
10034:
10031:
10029:
10026:
10024:
10021:
10019:
10016:
10014:
10011:
10009:
10006:
10004:
10001:
9999:
9996:
9994:
9991:
9989:
9986:
9984:
9981:
9979:
9976:
9972:
9969:
9968:
9967:
9964:
9962:
9959:
9955:
9952:
9951:
9950:
9947:
9945:
9942:
9940:
9937:
9935:
9932:
9930:
9927:
9925:
9922:
9920:
9917:
9915:
9912:
9910:
9907:
9905:
9902:
9900:
9897:
9895:
9892:
9890:
9887:
9885:
9882:
9880:
9877:
9875:
9872:
9870:
9867:
9865:
9862:
9860:
9857:
9855:
9852:
9850:
9847:
9845:
9842:
9841:
9839:
9835:18th and 19th
9833:
9827:
9824:
9822:
9819:
9817:
9814:
9812:
9809:
9807:
9804:
9802:
9799:
9797:
9794:
9792:
9789:
9787:
9784:
9782:
9779:
9777:
9774:
9770:
9767:
9766:
9765:
9762:
9760:
9757:
9755:
9752:
9750:
9747:
9745:
9742:
9740:
9737:
9735:
9732:
9730:
9727:
9725:
9722:
9721:
9719:
9713:
9707:
9704:
9702:
9699:
9697:
9694:
9692:
9691:Nizam al-Mulk
9689:
9687:
9684:
9682:
9679:
9677:
9674:
9672:
9669:
9667:
9664:
9662:
9659:
9657:
9654:
9652:
9649:
9647:
9644:
9642:
9639:
9638:
9636:
9632:
9626:
9623:
9621:
9618:
9616:
9613:
9611:
9608:
9606:
9603:
9599:
9596:
9595:
9594:
9591:
9589:
9586:
9584:
9581:
9579:
9576:
9574:
9571:
9569:
9566:
9564:
9561:
9559:
9556:
9554:
9551:
9550:
9548:
9544:
9541:
9539:
9535:
9529:
9526:
9524:
9521:
9519:
9516:
9514:
9511:
9509:
9506:
9504:
9501:
9499:
9496:
9494:
9491:
9489:
9486:
9483:
9482:
9477:
9475:
9472:
9470:
9467:
9465:
9462:
9460:
9457:
9455:
9452:
9450:
9447:
9445:
9442:
9440:
9437:
9435:
9432:
9430:
9427:
9425:
9422:
9419:
9418:
9413:
9411:
9408:
9407:
9405:
9401:
9395:
9392:
9390:
9387:
9385:
9382:
9380:
9377:
9375:
9374:Republicanism
9372:
9370:
9367:
9365:
9362:
9360:
9357:
9355:
9352:
9350:
9347:
9345:
9342:
9340:
9337:
9335:
9332:
9330:
9327:
9325:
9322:
9320:
9317:
9315:
9312:
9310:
9307:
9305:
9302:
9300:
9297:
9295:
9292:
9290:
9287:
9285:
9282:
9280:
9277:
9275:
9272:
9270:
9267:
9265:
9262:
9260:
9257:
9255:
9252:
9250:
9247:
9245:
9242:
9241:
9239:
9235:
9229:
9226:
9224:
9221:
9219:
9216:
9214:
9211:
9209:
9206:
9204:
9201:
9199:
9196:
9194:
9191:
9189:
9186:
9184:
9181:
9179:
9176:
9174:
9171:
9170:
9168:
9164:
9158:
9155:
9153:
9150:
9148:
9145:
9143:
9140:
9138:
9135:
9133:
9130:
9128:
9125:
9123:
9120:
9118:
9115:
9113:
9110:
9108:
9105:
9103:
9100:
9098:
9095:
9093:
9090:
9088:
9085:
9083:
9080:
9078:
9075:
9073:
9070:
9068:
9065:
9063:
9060:
9058:
9055:
9053:
9050:
9048:
9045:
9043:
9040:
9038:
9035:
9033:
9030:
9028:
9025:
9023:
9020:
9018:
9015:
9013:
9010:
9008:
9005:
9003:
9000:
8999:
8997:
8993:
8989:
8982:
8977:
8975:
8970:
8968:
8963:
8962:
8959:
8947:
8944:
8943:
8940:
8934:
8931:
8929:
8928:Social theory
8926:
8924:
8921:
8919:
8916:
8914:
8911:
8909:
8906:
8904:
8901:
8899:
8896:
8894:
8891:
8889:
8886:
8884:
8881:
8879:
8876:
8874:
8871:
8869:
8866:
8864:
8861:
8859:
8856:
8854:
8851:
8850:
8848:
8844:
8835:
8834:
8830:
8825:
8824:
8820:
8815:
8814:
8810:
8805:
8804:
8800:
8795:
8794:
8790:
8785:
8784:
8780:
8775:
8774:
8770:
8765:
8764:
8760:
8755:
8754:
8750:
8745:
8744:
8740:
8735:
8734:
8730:
8725:
8724:
8720:
8715:
8714:
8710:
8705:
8704:
8700:
8695:
8694:
8690:
8685:
8684:
8680:
8679:
8677:
8673:
8663:
8660:
8658:
8655:
8653:
8650:
8648:
8645:
8643:
8640:
8638:
8635:
8633:
8630:
8628:
8625:
8623:
8620:
8618:
8615:
8613:
8610:
8608:
8605:
8603:
8600:
8598:
8595:
8593:
8590:
8588:
8585:
8583:
8582:Radhakrishnan
8580:
8578:
8575:
8573:
8570:
8568:
8565:
8563:
8560:
8558:
8555:
8553:
8550:
8548:
8545:
8543:
8540:
8538:
8535:
8533:
8530:
8528:
8525:
8523:
8520:
8518:
8515:
8513:
8510:
8508:
8505:
8503:
8500:
8498:
8495:
8493:
8490:
8488:
8485:
8483:
8480:
8478:
8475:
8473:
8470:
8468:
8465:
8463:
8460:
8458:
8455:
8453:
8450:
8448:
8445:
8443:
8440:
8438:
8435:
8433:
8430:
8428:
8425:
8423:
8420:
8418:
8415:
8413:
8410:
8408:
8405:
8403:
8400:
8398:
8395:
8393:
8390:
8388:
8385:
8383:
8380:
8378:
8375:
8373:
8370:
8368:
8365:
8363:
8360:
8358:
8355:
8353:
8350:
8349:
8347:
8343:20th and 21st
8341:
8335:
8332:
8330:
8327:
8325:
8322:
8320:
8317:
8315:
8312:
8310:
8307:
8305:
8302:
8300:
8297:
8295:
8292:
8290:
8287:
8285:
8282:
8280:
8277:
8275:
8272:
8270:
8267:
8265:
8262:
8260:
8257:
8255:
8252:
8250:
8247:
8245:
8242:
8240:
8237:
8235:
8232:
8230:
8227:
8225:
8222:
8220:
8217:
8215:
8212:
8210:
8207:
8205:
8202:
8200:
8197:
8195:
8192:
8190:
8187:
8185:
8182:
8180:
8177:
8175:
8172:
8170:
8167:
8165:
8162:
8160:
8157:
8155:
8152:
8150:
8147:
8145:
8142:
8141:
8139:
8135:18th and 19th
8133:
8127:
8124:
8122:
8119:
8117:
8114:
8112:
8109:
8107:
8104:
8102:
8099:
8097:
8094:
8092:
8089:
8088:
8086:
8082:
8076:
8073:
8071:
8068:
8066:
8063:
8061:
8058:
8056:
8053:
8051:
8048:
8046:
8043:
8041:
8038:
8036:
8033:
8031:
8028:
8026:
8023:
8021:
8018:
8017:
8015:
8011:
8005:
8002:
8000:
7997:
7995:
7992:
7990:
7987:
7985:
7982:
7980:
7977:
7975:
7972:
7970:
7967:
7965:
7962:
7960:
7957:
7955:
7952:
7950:
7947:
7945:
7942:
7940:
7937:
7935:
7932:
7931:
7929:
7925:
7922:
7918:
7912:
7909:
7907:
7904:
7900:
7897:
7896:
7895:
7892:
7890:
7887:
7885:
7882:
7878:
7875:
7874:
7873:
7870:
7868:
7865:
7864:
7862:
7858:
7852:
7849:
7846:
7845:
7840:
7836:
7833:
7832:
7831:
7828:
7826:
7823:
7821:
7818:
7816:
7813:
7811:
7808:
7806:
7803:
7800:
7799:
7794:
7792:
7789:
7786:
7785:
7780:
7778:
7775:
7773:
7770:
7768:
7765:
7763:
7760:
7756:
7753:
7752:
7751:
7748:
7746:
7743:
7741:
7738:
7736:
7733:
7731:
7728:
7726:
7723:
7719:
7716:
7715:
7714:
7711:
7709:
7706:
7704:
7701:
7699:
7696:
7694:
7691:
7687:
7684:
7683:
7682:
7679:
7675:
7672:
7670:
7667:
7665:
7662:
7661:
7660:
7657:
7655:
7652:
7650:
7647:
7645:
7642:
7640:
7637:
7635:
7632:
7630:
7627:
7626:
7624:
7620:
7616:
7609:
7604:
7602:
7597:
7595:
7590:
7589:
7586:
7574:
7571:
7570:
7568:
7564:
7558:
7555:
7553:
7550:
7548:
7545:
7543:
7540:
7538:
7535:
7533:
7530:
7526:
7523:
7522:
7521:
7518:
7517:
7515:
7511:
7504:
7503:
7499:
7496:
7495:
7491:
7488:
7487:
7483:
7482:
7480:
7476:
7469:
7468:
7464:
7462:
7460:
7459:Paradise Lost
7456:
7455:
7453:
7449:
7442:
7441:
7440:Paradise Lost
7437:
7434:
7433:
7432:Paradise Lost
7428:
7427:
7425:
7421:
7415:
7412:
7411:
7409:
7405:
7401:
7400:
7399:Paradise Lost
7395:
7388:
7383:
7381:
7376:
7374:
7369:
7368:
7365:
7359:
7352:
7340:
7337:
7334:
7333:
7329:
7327:
7324:
7322:
7319:
7317:
7314:
7313:
7311:
7307:
7301:
7300:
7296:
7295:
7293:
7289:
7282:
7278:
7275:
7271:
7268:
7264:
7263:
7261:
7257:
7251:
7250:
7246:
7244:
7243:
7239:
7237:
7236:
7232:
7231:
7229:
7225:
7219:
7216:
7214:
7211:
7209:
7206:
7204:
7201:
7199:
7198:Eikonoklastes
7196:
7194:
7191:
7189:
7186:
7185:
7183:
7181:
7177:
7171:
7168:
7166:
7163:
7161:
7158:
7156:
7153:
7152:
7150:
7148:
7144:
7138:
7135:
7133:
7130:
7128:
7125:
7123:
7120:
7118:
7115:
7114:
7112:
7110:
7106:
7100:
7098:
7094:
7092:
7091:
7087:
7085:
7084:
7080:
7078:
7077:
7076:Paradise Lost
7073:
7068:
7064:
7061:
7057:
7054:
7050:
7048:
7047:
7043:
7041:
7040:
7036:
7034:
7033:
7029:
7027:
7026:
7022:
7020:
7019:
7015:
7014:
7013:
7011:
7007:
7006:
7004:
7000:
6995:
6985:
6984:Relationships
6982:
6980:
6977:
6975:
6972:
6970:
6967:
6965:
6962:
6960:
6957:
6956:
6954:
6950:
6946:
6939:
6934:
6932:
6927:
6925:
6920:
6919:
6916:
6904:
6900:
6897:
6895:
6891:
6888:
6886:
6882:
6879:
6877:
6873:
6870:
6869:
6860:
6857:
6856:Wilson, A. N.
6854:
6851:
6848:
6845:
6842:
6838:
6835:
6831:
6828:
6824:
6820:
6817:
6813:
6809:
6804:
6799:
6795:
6792:
6789:
6786:
6783:
6779:
6777:(April 1955).
6776:
6772:
6769:
6766:
6762:
6759:
6755:
6752:
6748:
6745:
6742:
6738:
6735:
6731:
6730:Masson, David
6728:
6724:
6720:
6717:
6714:
6711:
6708:
6704:
6701:
6697:
6694:
6693:
6688:
6685:
6682:
6679:
6675:
6672:
6669:
6665:
6662:
6660:
6656:
6652:
6651:Hawkes, David
6649:
6646:
6642:
6638:
6632:
6616:
6612:
6606:
6602:
6598:
6594:
6590:
6589:
6588:Archived copy
6584:
6580:
6576:
6572:
6569:
6565:
6561:
6557:
6556:Fish, Stanley
6554:
6551:
6547:
6544:
6541:
6537:
6536:Harmondsworth
6533:
6529:
6526:
6522:
6519:
6515:
6511:
6507:
6504:
6500:
6497:
6494:
6490:
6487:
6486:
6472:
6463:
6453:
6445:
6441:
6437:
6431:
6427:
6423:
6422:
6414:
6407:
6401:
6392:
6383:
6374:
6365:
6356:
6347:
6338:
6329:
6320:
6311:
6302:
6293:
6284:
6277:
6276:
6269:
6253:
6249:
6243:
6227:
6223:
6217:
6201:
6197:
6191:
6184:
6180:
6175:
6159:
6155:
6149:
6145:
6144:
6136:
6129:
6125:
6122:
6119:
6115:
6110:
6103:
6097:
6081:
6077:
6076:
6071:
6065:
6058:
6052:
6045:
6041:
6035:
6033:
6025:
6019:
6003:
5999:
5993:
5986:
5980:
5973:
5967:
5960:
5956:
5951:
5944:
5938:
5931:
5926:
5917:
5910:
5904:
5897:
5893:
5888:
5872:
5868:
5862:
5855:
5849:
5833:
5829:
5822:
5814:
5808:
5804:
5797:
5781:
5777:
5773:
5766:
5759:
5755:
5751:
5747:
5742:
5735:
5731:
5726:
5720:(2000), p. 7.
5719:
5715:
5710:
5703:
5697:
5690:
5684:
5677:
5671:
5662:
5653:
5637:
5633:
5627:
5620:
5616:
5612:
5609:John Milton,
5606:
5599:
5595:
5590:
5582:
5580:
5572:
5565:
5561:
5557:
5551:
5542:
5535:
5532:John Rogers,
5529:
5522:
5516:
5508:
5504:
5500:
5496:
5492:
5488:
5484:
5480:
5473:
5465:
5461:
5457:
5453:
5449:
5445:
5438:
5430:
5426:
5422:
5418:
5413:
5408:
5405:(1): 77–106.
5404:
5400:
5396:
5389:
5380:
5374:
5368:
5361:
5355:
5348:
5342:
5334:
5330:
5326:
5322:
5318:
5317:
5309:
5301:
5297:
5293:
5289:
5288:
5280:
5278:
5269:
5263:
5259:
5252:
5250:
5240:
5233:
5229:
5223:
5216:
5212:
5202:Nigel Smith,
5199:
5192:
5188:
5183:
5175:
5171:
5167:
5163:
5159:
5155:
5151:
5147:
5140:
5132:
5126:
5119:
5113:
5106:
5102:
5097:
5090:
5084:
5075:
5068:
5064:
5059:
5052:
5049:James Tully,
5046:
5039:
5034:
5027:
5021:
5005:
5001:
4997:
4990:
4982:
4970:
4954:
4950:
4948:9780404035563
4944:
4940:
4939:
4931:
4912:
4908:
4904:
4897:
4890:
4888:
4879:
4873:
4869:
4862:
4854:
4847:
4845:
4837:
4831:
4824:
4820:
4816:
4810:
4794:
4790:
4786:
4780:
4772:
4768:
4764:
4760:
4756:
4752:
4745:
4729:
4725:
4723:
4715:
4707:
4703:
4699:
4695:
4691:
4684:
4675:
4668:
4667:
4663:
4660:
4653:
4644:
4637:
4631:
4623:
4617:
4611:Add MS 32310.
4610:
4604:
4595:
4579:
4575:
4571:
4565:
4558:
4554:
4551:
4545:
4543:
4534:
4530:
4526:
4522:
4518:
4514:
4510:
4506:
4499:
4483:
4479:
4475:
4469:
4461:
4457:
4453:
4446:
4438:
4434:
4429:
4424:
4420:
4416:
4412:
4408:
4404:
4397:
4388:
4372:
4368:
4364:
4358:
4350:
4344:
4340:
4339:
4331:
4323:
4319:
4315:
4311:
4304:
4295:
4287:
4286:
4281:
4268:
4261:
4255:
4239:
4235:
4229:
4225:
4224:
4216:
4209:
4203:
4196:
4190:
4181:
4172:
4164:
4149:
4145:
4141:
4140:
4134:
4126:
4124:
4114:
4105:
4096:
4087:
4078:
4069:
4060:
4051:
4042:
4033:
4024:
4015:
4006:
3997:
3990:
3984:
3975:
3966:
3957:
3949:
3945:
3939:
3930:
3928:
3917:
3908:
3900:
3894:
3890:
3886:
3882:
3878:
3871:
3863:
3859:
3858:
3850:
3848:
3838:
3830:
3829:
3821:
3814:
3810:
3807:
3803:
3798:
3789:
3781:
3777:
3776:
3771:
3764:
3748:
3744:
3740:
3739:"John Milton"
3734:
3730:
3714:
3710:
3698:
3697:
3692:
3689:
3686:
3683:
3682:
3678:
3675:
3674:
3670:
3667:
3666:
3662:
3659:
3658:
3654:
3651:
3650:
3646:
3643:
3642:
3638:
3635:
3634:
3630:
3627:
3626:
3622:
3619:
3618:
3614:
3611:
3610:
3606:
3603:
3602:
3598:
3595:
3594:
3590:
3587:
3586:
3585:Eikonoklastes
3582:
3579:
3578:
3574:
3571:
3570:
3566:
3563:
3562:
3558:
3555:
3554:
3550:
3547:
3546:
3542:
3539:
3538:
3534:
3531:
3530:
3526:
3523:
3522:
3518:
3515:
3514:
3510:
3507:
3506:
3502:
3499:
3498:
3494:
3491:
3490:
3486:
3485:
3476:
3473:
3471:
3470:
3465:
3463:
3462:
3457:
3455:
3454:
3449:
3447:
3446:
3445:Paradise Lost
3441:
3439:
3438:
3433:
3430:
3429:
3424:
3422:
3421:
3416:
3414:
3413:
3408:
3405:
3401:
3400:
3395:
3394:
3389:
3387:
3386:
3381:
3379:
3378:
3373:
3371:
3370:
3365:
3363:
3362:
3357:
3355:
3354:
3349:
3348:
3336:
3333:
3325:
3315:
3311:
3305:
3304:
3299:This section
3297:
3293:
3288:
3287:
3279:
3277:
3273:
3272:Cyril Rootham
3269:
3265:
3261:
3260:
3255:
3252:
3242:
3240:
3236:
3235:Paradise Lost
3232:
3231:
3226:
3225:
3220:
3216:
3212:
3211:Paradise Lost
3208:
3204:
3199:
3197:
3193:
3189:
3185:
3181:
3177:
3173:
3170:(trisyllabic
3169:
3166:
3165:hypermetrical
3162:
3158:
3154:
3148:
3143:
3140:
3138:
3137:
3136:Ode to Pyrrha
3132:
3128:
3127:
3122:
3115:
3111:
3109:
3108:Paradise Lost
3104:
3102:
3097:
3093:
3092:
3091:Paradise Lost
3087:
3079:
3075:
3070:
3061:
3058:
3056:
3055:
3050:
3046:
3045:
3040:
3036:
3035:
3030:
3029:Aldous Huxley
3026:
3025:
3020:
3015:
3013:
3012:Paradise Lost
3009:
3008:
3003:
3000:The title of
2998:
2996:
2992:
2988:
2984:
2983:
2977:
2975:
2974:
2969:
2964:
2960:
2956:
2952:
2948:
2944:
2940:
2936:
2926:
2924:
2923:Paradise Lost
2920:
2919:
2914:
2910:
2906:
2902:
2901:
2896:
2895:
2890:
2889:Paradise Lost
2886:
2882:
2881:Paradise Lost
2878:
2877:
2872:
2868:
2864:
2859:
2857:
2853:
2849:
2845:
2841:
2832:
2830:
2829:
2824:
2820:
2819:William Blake
2814:
2813:
2808:
2804:
2798:William Blake
2795:
2793:
2789:
2785:
2784:
2779:
2778:
2773:
2772:Paradise Lost
2769:
2765:
2764:Paradise Lost
2761:
2760:
2759:The Spectator
2755:
2751:
2750:Thomas Newton
2747:
2743:
2738:
2736:
2732:
2728:
2727:Theodore Haak
2724:
2723:Paradise Lost
2719:
2717:
2713:
2709:
2705:
2704:Paradise Lost
2701:
2696:
2694:
2693:Paradise Lost
2690:
2686:
2682:
2678:
2670:
2661:
2658:
2656:
2652:
2651:Radical Whigs
2648:
2644:
2640:
2636:
2632:
2628:
2624:
2620:
2619:Edmund Ludlow
2616:
2612:
2608:
2603:
2602:Paradise Lost
2592:
2587:
2585:
2581:
2577:
2573:
2569:
2565:
2564:Thomas Hobbes
2555:
2547:
2541:
2540:for all this?
2536:
2534:
2529:
2527:
2521:
2518:
2517:
2511:
2507:
2501:
2498:
2497:
2492:
2486:
2484:
2479:
2477:
2473:
2469:
2466:Milton wrote
2463:
2453:
2451:
2447:
2442:
2441:
2430:
2425:
2421:
2417:
2415:
2414:nonconformist
2411:
2405:
2403:
2399:
2398:
2392:
2390:
2386:
2382:
2377:
2375:
2371:
2370:Paradise Lost
2367:
2363:
2359:
2355:
2351:
2347:
2346:
2341:
2340:
2335:
2334:Paradise Lost
2330:
2328:
2324:
2320:
2316:
2312:
2308:
2304:
2300:
2295:
2293:
2289:
2285:
2284:Paulus Fagius
2281:
2277:
2273:
2272:Old Testament
2269:
2265:
2264:
2258:
2256:
2252:
2248:
2247:Areopagitica,
2243:
2239:
2238:
2233:
2229:
2225:
2221:
2216:
2214:
2210:
2204:
2202:
2198:
2194:
2189:
2182:
2172:
2169:
2165:
2161:
2160:
2155:
2149:
2145:
2143:
2142:
2137:
2133:
2129:
2128:John Streater
2125:
2121:
2117:
2113:
2112:Edmund Ludlow
2109:
2105:
2104:John Bradshaw
2101:
2096:
2091:
2089:
2085:
2084:
2078:
2074:
2070:
2066:
2062:
2058:
2052:
2050:
2049:Robert Filmer
2046:
2042:
2038:
2034:
2028:
2026:
2025:republicanism
2021:
2019:
2015:
2009:
2007:
2001:
2000:
1994:
1989:
1984:
1982:
1975:
1970:
1960:
1958:
1957:
1952:
1948:
1947:Paradise Lost
1944:
1940:
1937:
1933:
1929:
1925:
1920:
1910:
1908:
1904:
1899:
1898:
1886:
1884:
1880:
1876:
1872:
1871:Paradise Lost
1868:
1867:
1862:
1861:
1856:
1855:Paradise Lost
1851:
1849:
1845:
1841:
1838:to publisher
1837:
1836:Paradise Lost
1832:
1830:
1826:
1822:
1821:
1820:Paradise Lost
1817:
1814:
1810:
1809:
1801:
1797:
1793:
1788:
1787:Paradise Lost
1781:
1780:Paradise Lost
1776:
1774:
1773:
1772:Paradise Lost
1768:
1764:
1760:
1756:
1755:
1750:
1746:
1742:
1732:
1730:
1729:John Phillips
1726:
1723:His nephews,
1721:
1719:
1715:
1711:
1707:
1702:
1700:
1695:
1689:
1686:
1683:
1680:
1679:
1678:
1670:
1668:
1664:
1660:
1656:
1652:
1642:
1632:
1623:
1609:
1607:
1603:
1599:
1595:
1591:
1587:
1583:
1579:
1574:
1572:
1568:
1564:
1560:
1555:
1551:
1547:
1539:
1535:
1531:
1527:
1523:
1522:General Monck
1519:
1518:
1514:
1511:
1508:
1505:
1501:
1497:
1494:
1493:
1492:
1490:
1486:
1482:
1481:
1471:
1467:
1463:
1454:
1452:
1448:
1444:
1441:and prose to
1440:
1436:
1432:
1427:
1425:
1421:
1417:
1412:
1408:
1404:
1400:
1396:
1392:
1388:
1383:
1381:
1377:
1376:First Defence
1373:
1372:First Defence
1369:
1368:
1362:
1360:
1356:
1352:
1348:
1344:
1340:
1339:
1334:
1333:
1332:Eikonoklastes
1324:
1320:
1316:
1312:
1307:
1303:
1301:
1297:
1293:
1292:
1281:
1279:
1275:
1271:
1270:
1265:
1261:
1257:
1252:
1250:
1246:
1241:
1239:
1238:
1233:
1227:
1225:
1221:
1217:
1216:
1211:
1207:
1203:
1199:
1198:Parliamentary
1195:
1191:
1187:
1183:
1182:Bishops' Wars
1176:
1175:
1169:
1164:
1154:
1152:
1147:
1143:
1139:
1135:
1131:
1126:
1122:
1117:
1115:
1111:
1107:
1103:
1099:
1096:and the poet
1095:
1091:
1087:
1080:
1078:
1071:
1065:
1063:
1059:
1055:
1051:
1047:
1043:
1039:
1035:
1031:
1027:
1023:
1019:
1015:
1011:
1006:
1004:
1000:
999:
994:
990:
984:
983:, Cambridge.
982:
978:
977:
973:
970:
966:
962:
958:
954:
950:
949:
944:
943:
935:
930:
926:
924:
920:
916:
912:
908:
902:
900:
899:
894:
887:
880:
870:
868:
867:
862:
861:
856:
855:Thomas Hobson
852:
847:
845:
841:
837:
833:
829:
824:
822:
818:
814:
810:
806:
802:
798:
794:
789:
787:
783:
779:
775:
771:
766:
764:
760:
759:
754:
749:
747:
743:
739:
735:
730:
728:
724:
720:
716:
712:
711:Protestantism
708:
704:
700:
693:
689:
685:
680:
673:
669:
664:
659:
649:
647:
643:
639:
635:
630:
628:
623:
621:
617:
613:
609:
605:
601:
596:
594:
590:
586:
585:William Blake
582:
578:
577:Paradise Lost
574:
570:
569:republicanism
566:
562:
557:
555:
551:
550:Ancient Greek
547:
543:
539:
535:
531:
530:
524:
522:
518:
514:
510:
509:Paradise Lost
506:
502:
498:
495:
491:
487:
483:
480:, written in
479:
478:
477:Paradise Lost
474:
470:
469:civil servant
466:
457:
452:
447:
443:
439:
435:
429:
424:
421:
414:
410:
406:
402:
399:
398:
393:
392:
387:
386:
381:
380:
379:Paradise Lost
376:
374:Notable works
372:
367:
364:
362:
359:
358:
357:
353:
349:
345:
339:
336:
334:
331:
329:
326:
325:
323:
319:
314:
311:
309:
306:
305:
304:
300:
295:
292:
290:
287:
284:
282:
279:
276:
273:
270:
267:
264:
262:
259:
256:
255:
254:
250:
247:
243:
239:
235:
209:
208:
178:
177:
147:
146:
144:
140:
134:Civil Servant
133:
130:
127:
126:
124:
120:
117:
114:
110:
107:
104:
102:Resting place
100:
95:
85:
81:
76:
63:
59:
52:
47:
40:
37:
33:
19:
11146:Rhetoricians
11116:Pamphleteers
10823:
10722:Elite theory
10670:
10660:
10650:
10640:
10630:
10620:
10610:
10600:
10590:
10580:
10570:
10560:
10550:
10540:
10530:
10520:
10510:
10500:
10490:
10480:
10470:
10460:
9800:
9759:Guicciardini
9715:Early modern
9538:Philosophers
9488:Open society
9424:Body politic
9294:Distributism
9284:Conservatism
9279:Confucianism
9198:Gerontocracy
9188:Dictatorship
9142:Sovereignty
9132:Ruling class
9022:Emancipation
9007:Citizenship
8831:
8821:
8811:
8801:
8791:
8781:
8771:
8761:
8751:
8741:
8731:
8721:
8711:
8701:
8691:
8681:
8115:
8101:Guicciardini
8084:Early modern
7920:Philosophers
7894:Conservatism
7889:Confucianism
7877:Distributism
7810:Social norms
7798:Sittlichkeit
7784:Ressentiment
7730:Institutions
7708:Human nature
7500:
7492:
7484:
7465:
7458:
7438:
7431:
7397:
7393:
7330:
7298:
7247:
7240:
7235:Of Education
7233:
7188:Areopagitica
7165:Tetrachordon
7096:
7088:
7081:
7074:
7067:Il Penseroso
7044:
7037:
7030:
7023:
7016:
7009:
6959:Poetic style
6944:
6858:
6849:
6840:
6833:
6826:
6822:
6815:
6807:
6781:
6774:
6764:
6757:
6750:
6740:
6733:
6722:
6715:
6706:
6699:
6690:
6677:
6667:
6644:
6619:. Retrieved
6592:
6587:
6575:Flew, Antony
6559:
6549:
6546:Eliot, T. S.
6531:
6524:
6513:
6509:
6502:
6492:
6471:
6462:
6452:
6420:
6413:
6405:
6400:
6391:
6382:
6373:
6364:
6355:
6346:
6337:
6328:
6319:
6310:
6301:
6292:
6283:
6273:
6268:
6256:. Retrieved
6252:the original
6242:
6230:. Retrieved
6226:the original
6216:
6204:. Retrieved
6200:the original
6190:
6182:
6179:Harold Bloom
6174:
6162:. Retrieved
6142:
6135:
6117:
6109:
6101:
6096:
6084:. Retrieved
6074:
6064:
6057:Frankenstein
6056:
6051:
6023:
6018:
6006:. Retrieved
5992:
5979:
5971:
5966:
5958:
5950:
5942:
5937:
5929:
5925:
5916:
5908:
5903:
5895:
5887:
5875:. Retrieved
5861:
5853:
5848:
5836:. Retrieved
5832:the original
5821:
5802:
5796:
5784:. Retrieved
5775:
5765:
5749:
5741:
5733:
5730:J. P. Kenyon
5725:
5717:
5714:Kevin Sharpe
5709:
5701:
5696:
5688:
5683:
5675:
5670:
5661:
5652:
5640:. Retrieved
5636:the original
5626:
5618:
5614:
5610:
5605:
5597:
5589:
5578:
5571:
5555:
5550:
5541:
5533:
5528:
5520:
5515:
5482:
5478:
5472:
5447:
5443:
5437:
5402:
5398:
5388:
5379:
5367:
5359:
5354:
5346:
5341:
5314:
5308:
5291:
5285:
5257:
5239:
5231:
5227:
5222:
5214:
5203:
5198:
5190:
5182:
5149:
5145:
5139:
5130:
5125:
5117:
5112:
5104:
5101:G. E. Aylmer
5096:
5088:
5083:
5074:
5066:
5058:
5050:
5045:
5037:
5033:
5025:
5020:
5008:. Retrieved
4999:
4989:
4957:. Retrieved
4937:
4930:
4918:. Retrieved
4906:
4903:The Dialogue
4902:
4867:
4861:
4852:
4835:
4830:
4822:
4818:
4814:
4809:
4797:. Retrieved
4793:the original
4779:
4754:
4750:
4744:
4732:. Retrieved
4721:
4714:
4689:
4683:
4674:
4657:
4652:
4643:
4635:
4630:
4621:
4616:
4603:
4594:
4584:14 September
4582:. Retrieved
4573:
4564:
4508:
4504:
4498:
4486:. Retrieved
4482:the original
4477:
4468:
4451:
4445:
4410:
4406:
4396:
4387:
4375:. Retrieved
4366:
4357:
4337:
4330:
4313:
4309:
4303:
4294:
4283:
4267:
4259:
4254:
4242:. Retrieved
4222:
4215:
4207:
4202:
4194:
4189:
4180:
4171:
4151:. Retrieved
4137:
4113:
4104:
4095:
4086:
4077:
4068:
4059:
4050:
4041:
4032:
4023:
4014:
4005:
3996:
3991:. pp. 363–73
3988:
3983:
3974:
3965:
3956:
3947:
3938:
3916:
3907:
3880:
3877:"St. Paul's"
3870:
3856:
3837:
3827:
3820:
3801:
3797:
3788:
3773:
3763:
3751:. Retrieved
3742:
3733:
3713:
3687:
3679:
3671:
3663:
3655:
3647:
3639:
3631:
3623:
3615:
3607:
3599:
3591:
3583:
3575:
3567:
3561:Tetrachordon
3559:
3553:Areopagitica
3551:
3545:Of Education
3543:
3535:
3527:
3519:
3511:
3503:
3495:
3487:
3467:
3459:
3451:
3443:
3435:
3426:
3418:
3410:
3397:
3391:
3385:Il Penseroso
3383:
3375:
3367:
3359:
3351:
3328:
3319:
3308:Please help
3303:verification
3300:
3267:
3264:Hubert Parry
3257:
3253:
3248:
3234:
3228:
3222:
3210:
3207:Francis Peck
3200:
3150:
3145:
3141:
3134:
3124:
3117:
3113:
3107:
3105:
3089:
3083:
3059:
3052:
3042:
3032:
3022:
3019:Thomas Wolfe
3016:
3011:
3005:
2999:
2991:Areopagitica
2990:
2982:Areopagitica
2980:
2978:
2971:
2968:Harold Bloom
2962:
2958:
2955:F. R. Leavis
2943:Thomas Hardy
2939:George Eliot
2932:
2929:Later legacy
2922:
2918:Frankenstein
2916:
2913:Mary Shelley
2898:
2892:
2888:
2880:
2874:
2860:
2855:
2840:Edmund Burke
2838:
2826:
2817:
2810:
2807:Frontispiece
2792:l'admiration
2791:
2781:
2775:
2771:
2763:
2757:
2739:
2735:Henry Fuseli
2722:
2720:
2703:
2697:
2692:
2689:Patrick Hume
2684:
2675:
2659:
2601:
2599:
2589:
2583:
2561:
2552:
2545:
2538:
2530:
2525:
2522:
2503:
2494:
2488:
2480:
2467:
2465:
2440:Areopagitica
2438:
2436:
2427:
2423:
2419:
2407:
2395:
2393:
2388:
2380:
2378:
2369:
2350:Commonwealth
2343:
2337:
2333:
2331:
2327:Four Empires
2297:Through the
2296:
2288:David Pareus
2275:
2261:
2259:
2246:
2235:
2217:
2205:
2192:
2184:
2168:oligarchical
2157:
2151:
2147:
2139:
2124:Edward Sexby
2116:Henry Marten
2092:
2081:
2065:Blair Worden
2054:
2030:
2022:
2014:Areopagitica
2013:
2010:
2006:Areopagitica
2005:
2004:
1999:Areopagitica
1997:
1987:
1981:Areopagitica
1980:
1977:
1972:
1955:
1950:
1946:
1916:
1907:Areopagitica
1906:
1892:
1878:
1870:
1864:
1858:
1854:
1852:
1835:
1833:
1818:
1806:
1804:
1795:
1779:
1770:
1766:
1762:
1758:
1752:
1741:Second Folio
1738:
1722:
1703:
1696:
1693:
1676:
1648:
1585:
1581:
1578:Art of Logic
1577:
1575:
1543:
1515:
1509:
1495:
1488:
1478:
1475:
1428:
1410:
1405:(in fact by
1402:
1390:
1386:
1384:
1379:
1375:
1371:
1365:
1363:
1350:
1336:
1330:
1328:
1289:
1287:
1274:Areopagitica
1273:
1267:
1253:
1242:
1237:Of Education
1235:
1228:
1220:William Laud
1213:
1205:
1201:
1179:
1174:Areopagitica
1172:
1142:Lukas Holste
1133:
1124:
1118:
1098:Patrick Cary
1094:Henry Holden
1082:
1076:
1073:
1068:
1046:house arrest
1022:Hugo Grotius
1014:Henry Wotton
1007:
996:
985:
974:
956:
946:
940:
938:
922:
904:
896:
889:
884:
866:Il Penseroso
864:
858:
848:
825:
817:Isaac Newton
801:Elegia Prima
800:
790:
767:
756:
750:
734:Thomas Young
731:
699:Bread Street
696:
668:Bread Street
631:
624:
597:
593:Thomas Hardy
576:
558:
529:Areopagitica
527:
525:
508:
494:fallen angel
490:Adam and Eve
475:
464:
463:
427:
395:
389:
385:Areopagitica
383:
377:
308:17th century
245:
131:Intellectual
88:(1674-11-08)
75:Bread Street
36:
10966:Blind poets
10876:1674 deaths
10871:1608 births
10866:John Milton
10596:(1835–1840)
10476:(c. 350 BC)
10466:(c. 375 BC)
10083:Tocqueville
10048:Saint-Simon
10013:Montesquieu
9864:Bolingbroke
9796:Machiavelli
9676:Ibn Khaldun
9641:Alpharabius
9634:Middle Ages
9459:Natural law
9434:Common good
9359:Nationalism
9319:Imperialism
9289:Corporatism
9264:Colonialism
9244:Agrarianism
9223:Technocracy
9203:Meritocracy
9183:Bureaucracy
9173:Aristocracy
8888:Historicism
8717:(1835–1840)
8683:De Officiis
8407:de Beauvoir
8377:Baudrillard
8329:Vivekananda
8319:Tocqueville
8234:Kierkegaard
8050:Ibn Khaldun
8020:Alpharabius
7911:Personalism
7820:Stewardship
7777:Reification
7772:Natural law
7693:Familialism
7659:Culturalism
7573:Pandæmonium
7470:(1671 poem)
7423:Adaptations
7414:Fall of man
7394:John Milton
7335:(1804–1810)
7170:Colasterion
7032:The Passion
6945:John Milton
6164:28 November
6086:25 December
5152:(1): 1–13.
4909:: 355–356.
4690:The Library
4609:call number
4280:Lee, Sidney
3885:Lion Hudson
3681:Prolusiones
3569:Colasterion
3224:The Seasons
3096:Isaac Watts
3086:blank verse
2947:T. S. Eliot
2909:Susan Gubar
2876:The Prelude
2867:blank verse
2683:. Dryden's
2677:John Dryden
2607:Shakespeare
2299:Interregnum
2280:John Calvin
2278:: those of
2255:Anabaptists
2228:Socinianism
2188:Renaissance
2093:He praised
2041:absolutists
2037:contraction
1951:De Doctrina
1939:determinism
1936:mechanistic
1813:blank-verse
1808:magnum opus
1765:in 1638 in
1749:First Folio
1743:edition of
1714:John Aubrey
1659:consumption
1655:Fore Street
1546:Restoration
1485:Erastianism
1451:John Newton
1210:Smectymnuus
907:Hammersmith
828:Edward King
809:John Aubrey
763:John Aubrey
758:Brief Lives
727:Henry Lawes
703:John Milton
634:T. S. Eliot
620:Restoration
608:pamphleteer
486:fall of man
482:blank verse
471:. His 1667
465:John Milton
313:Restoration
281:Old English
152:Mary Powell
122:Occupations
94:Bunhill Row
43:John Milton
11156:Sonneteers
11066:Epic poets
10860:Categories
10804:Separatism
10612:On Liberty
10512:The Prince
10241:Huntington
9744:Campanella
9671:al-Ghazali
9620:Thucydides
9578:Lactantius
9523:Statolatry
9349:Monarchism
9329:Liberalism
9254:Capitalism
9237:Ideologies
9218:Plutocracy
9166:Government
9122:Revolution
9107:Propaganda
9057:Legitimacy
9032:Government
8893:Humanities
8853:Agnotology
8512:Kołakowski
8075:Ibn Tufayl
8055:Maimonides
7999:Thucydides
7994:Tertullian
7949:Lactantius
7844:Volksgeist
7825:Traditions
7639:Convention
7542:Son of God
7513:Characters
7486:Black Aria
6979:Early life
6659:1582434379
6552:33 (1947).
6516:, 2nd ed (
6489:Beer, Anna
6435:0195018982
6404:Gray 1748
6044:0198186347
5941:Voltaire,
5838:9 December
5674:Lewalski,
5564:0838718418
5345:Lewalski,
5103:(editor),
4920:28 January
4678:Hill 1977.
4488:3 February
4452:CEA Critic
4165:required.)
4153:25 October
3887:. p.
3725:References
3322:April 2017
3239:John Keats
3203:neologisms
2951:Ezra Pound
2911:note that
2885:John Keats
2643:John Locke
2450:toleration
2402:Dissenters
2366:Charles II
2319:Millennium
1913:Philosophy
1883:prolusions
1879:1645 Poems
1825:Revolution
1754:1645 Poems
1706:Manchester
1602:Whig party
1590:toleration
1443:amanuenses
1347:Charles II
1319:James Mill
1190:episcopacy
1149:coming to
989:grand tour
961:temperance
793:rusticated
515:under its
67:1608-12-09
10522:Leviathan
10502:Monarchia
10496:(c. 1274)
10331:Oakeshott
10276:Mansfield
10271:Luxemburg
10256:Kropotkin
10151:Bernstein
10104:centuries
10018:Nietzsche
9961:Jefferson
9889:Condorcet
9837:centuries
9816:Pufendorf
9681:Marsilius
9568:Confucius
9553:Aristotle
9546:Antiquity
9474:Noble lie
9394:Third Way
9389:Socialism
9314:Feudalism
9269:Communism
9249:Anarchism
9228:Theocracy
9213:Oligarchy
9193:Democracy
9178:Autocracy
9092:Pluralism
9077:Obedience
9042:Hierarchy
9002:Authority
8933:Sociology
8883:Historism
8592:Santayana
8562:Oakeshott
8532:MacIntyre
8517:Kropotkin
8492:Heidegger
8345:centuries
8259:Nietzsche
8224:Jefferson
8209:Helvétius
8174:Condorcet
8137:centuries
8121:Montaigne
7944:Confucius
7934:Augustine
7851:Worldview
7745:Modernity
7718:Formation
7060:L'Allegro
6765:The Verse
6540:Middlesex
6518:Routledge
6258:4 January
6232:4 January
6206:4 January
6130:pp. 10–14
6008:4 January
5877:4 January
5678:, p. 199.
5507:164025552
5464:145208136
5421:166722595
5349:, p. 253.
5166:162341986
4979:ignored (
4969:cite book
4706:0024-2160
4533:156318897
3753:7 October
3377:L'Allegro
3249:Milton's
3176:inversion
3168:syllables
2979:Milton's
2915:'s novel
2848:aesthetic
2627:John Knox
2496:Gangraena
2385:salvation
2374:mortalism
2251:Arminians
2031:... with
1932:Descartes
1848:shillings
1816:epic poem
1805:Milton's
1594:Exclusion
1559:Wistaston
1544:Upon the
1538:oligarchy
1466:Engraving
1380:Sonnet 16
1260:Anna Beer
1249:Civil War
1140:and meet
1062:Svogliati
860:L'Allegro
851:prolusion
740:from the
719:Cheapside
715:scrivener
616:Charles I
612:publicist
552:) to the
473:epic poem
449:Signature
428:In office
10777:Centrism
10472:Politics
10462:Republic
10431:Voegelin
10411:Spengler
10396:Shariati
10371:Rothbard
10326:Nussbaum
10226:Habermas
10201:Fukuyama
10191:Foucault
10116:Ambedkar
10093:Voltaire
10063:de Staël
10038:Rousseau
9919:Franklin
9894:Constant
9854:Beccaria
9686:Muhammad
9666:Gelasius
9651:Averroes
9625:Xenophon
9605:Polybius
9558:Chanakya
9403:Concepts
9369:Populism
9339:Localism
9324:Islamism
9309:Feminism
9208:Monarchy
9112:Property
9102:Progress
9067:Monopoly
9037:Hegemony
8946:Category
8858:Axiology
8846:See also
8637:Voegelin
8627:Spengler
8602:Shariati
8557:Nussbaum
8542:Maritain
8502:Irigaray
8482:Habermas
8447:Foucault
8432:Durkheim
8334:Voltaire
8299:de Staël
8274:Rousseau
8199:Franklin
8060:Muhammad
8045:Gelasius
8030:Avempace
8013:Medieval
7989:Polybius
7984:Plutarch
7750:Morality
7725:Ideology
7713:Identity
7622:Concepts
7291:Disputed
6974:Politics
6969:Religion
6903:LibriVox
6800:(1902).
6621:28 March
6615:Archived
6577:(2008).
6457:110–111.
6158:Archived
6124:Archived
6080:Archived
6002:Archived
5871:Archived
5780:Archived
5748:(2005),
5300:27703025
5010:2 August
5004:Archived
4959:29 March
4953:Archived
4911:Archived
4799:25 April
4734:12 March
4728:Archived
4662:Archived
4578:Archived
4553:Archived
4460:44378181
4437:18168884
4377:3 August
4371:Archived
4322:41555744
4238:Archived
3809:Archived
3780:Archived
3747:Archived
3180:stresses
3161:enjambed
3157:Caesural
2894:Hyperion
2852:infinity
2788:Voltaire
2543:—
2510:polygamy
2360:, while
2224:Arianism
2197:Caroline
2175:Theology
2043:such as
1604:and the
1530:jeremiad
1435:glaucoma
1296:regicide
1188:against
1138:Carnival
1060:and the
1058:Apatisti
969:pastoral
965:chastity
782:Anglican
707:Catholic
575:praised
338:treatise
333:pamphlet
252:Language
237:Children
18:Miltonic
10814:Statism
10727:Elitism
10685:Related
10486:(51 BC)
10416:Strauss
10391:Scruton
10386:Schmitt
10376:Russell
10296:Michels
10291:Maurras
10286:Marcuse
10246:Kautsky
10216:Gramsci
10211:Gentile
10181:Dworkin
10171:Du Bois
10166:Dmowski
10161:Chomsky
10156:Burnham
10141:Benoist
10111:Agamben
10078:Thoreau
10068:Stirner
10058:Spencer
10003:Mazzini
9993:Maistre
9988:Madison
9983:Le Play
9914:Fourier
9879:Carlyle
9859:Bentham
9849:Bastiat
9844:Bakunin
9821:Spinoza
9811:Müntzer
9781:Leibniz
9754:Grotius
9734:Bossuet
9701:Plethon
9646:Aquinas
9615:Sun Tzu
9583:Mencius
9573:Han Fei
9344:Marxism
9304:Fascism
9137:Society
9062:Liberty
9047:Justice
9027:Freedom
8687:(44 BC)
8617:Sombart
8612:Skinner
8597:Scruton
8577:Polanyi
8552:Niebuhr
8537:Marcuse
8472:Gramsci
8467:Gentile
8427:Du Bois
8417:Deleuze
8387:Benoist
8357:Agamben
8314:Thoreau
8304:Stirner
8294:Spencer
8244:Le Play
8194:Fourier
8179:Emerson
8164:Carlyle
8149:Bentham
8126:Müntzer
8096:Erasmus
8070:Plethon
8065:Photios
8025:Aquinas
7959:Mencius
7927:Ancient
7860:Schools
7740:Loyalty
7698:History
7686:Counter
7681:Culture
7649:Customs
7557:Michael
7552:Raphael
7451:Related
7443:(opera)
7309:Related
7053:Lycidas
7039:Arcades
6892:at the
6818:(2013).
6585:(ed.).
6483:Sources
6444:1530446
5932:(1734).
5333:2914990
5217:(1998).
4282:(ed.).
3921:Center.
3775:YouTube
3412:Lycidas
3219:Thomson
3213:in his
3121:Collins
2844:sublime
2681:sublime
2576:Sallust
2568:Tacitus
2558:History
2512:in the
2491:Edwards
2456:Divorce
2410:Quakers
2276:Genesis
2268:Babylon
2220:Trinity
1763:Lycidas
1550:warrant
1534:liberty
1418:, then
1194:Puritan
1112:and to
1084:by the
1050:Arcetri
1042:Galileo
1034:Livorno
976:Lycidas
953:masques
942:Arcades
832:Lycidas
772:at the
492:by the
418:to the
391:Lycidas
366:Baroque
347:Subject
289:Aramaic
277:Italian
274:Spanish
257:English
230:
218:
206:
190:
186:
175:
159:
155:
142:Spouses
10676:(1992)
10666:(1971)
10656:(1951)
10646:(1945)
10636:(1944)
10626:(1929)
10616:(1859)
10606:(1848)
10586:(1820)
10576:(1791)
10566:(1790)
10556:(1762)
10546:(1748)
10536:(1689)
10526:(1651)
10516:(1532)
10506:(1313)
10436:Walzer
10426:Taylor
10381:Sartre
10346:Popper
10341:Pareto
10336:Ortega
10321:Nozick
10311:Mouffe
10261:Laclau
10221:Guénon
10206:Gandhi
10146:Berlin
10136:Bauman
10131:Badiou
10121:Arendt
10088:Tucker
9978:Le Bon
9939:Herder
9929:Haller
9924:Godwin
9909:Fichte
9904:Engels
9899:Cortés
9869:Bonald
9826:Suárez
9801:Milton
9791:Luther
9764:Hobbes
9749:Filmer
9739:Calvin
9724:Boétie
9717:period
9696:Ockham
9563:Cicero
9364:Nazism
9152:Utopia
9127:Rights
9117:Regime
9087:People
9072:Nation
8878:Ethics
8837:(2010)
8827:(1991)
8817:(1990)
8807:(1987)
8797:(1987)
8787:(1979)
8777:(1976)
8767:(1967)
8757:(1964)
8747:(1949)
8737:(1935)
8727:(1930)
8707:(1756)
8697:(1486)
8642:Walzer
8632:Taylor
8622:Sowell
8607:Simmel
8572:Pareto
8567:Ortega
8477:Guénon
8462:Gehlen
8457:Gandhi
8412:Debord
8397:Butler
8392:Berlin
8382:Bauman
8372:Badiou
8362:Arendt
8352:Adorno
8284:Ruskin
8239:Le Bon
8214:Herder
8189:Fichte
8184:Engels
8154:Bonald
8144:Arnold
8116:Milton
8111:Luther
8091:Calvin
7969:Origen
7939:Cicero
7899:Social
7835:Family
7830:Values
7791:Rights
7755:Public
7703:Honour
7634:Anomie
7629:Agency
7566:Places
7505:(2015)
7497:(2003)
7489:(1992)
7478:Albums
7407:Source
7002:Poetry
6952:Topics
6657:
6607:
6566:
6442:
6432:
6150:
6042:
5809:
5786:11 May
5756:
5642:10 May
5562:
5505:
5499:458943
5497:
5462:
5429:718867
5427:
5419:
5331:
5298:
5264:
5191:Milton
5172:
5164:
4945:
4874:
4819:passim
4771:509858
4769:
4704:
4531:
4525:460581
4523:
4458:
4435:
4428:511199
4425:
4345:
4320:
4276:
4244:27 May
4230:
4159:
3895:
3700:(1823)
3690:(1682)
3684:(1674)
3676:(1674)
3668:(1673)
3660:(1672)
3652:(1670)
3644:(1669)
3636:(1660)
3628:(1660)
3620:(1659)
3612:(1659)
3604:(1654)
3596:(1651)
3588:(1649)
3580:(1649)
3572:(1645)
3564:(1645)
3556:(1644)
3548:(1644)
3540:(1644)
3532:(1643)
3524:(1642)
3516:(1642)
3508:(1641)
3500:(1641)
3492:(1641)
3466:1673:
3458:1671:
3450:1671:
3442:1667:
3434:1655:
3425:1652:
3417:1645:
3409:1637:
3404:masque
3390:1634:
3382:1632:
3374:1632:
3366:1631:
3358:1630:
3350:1629:
3190:, and
3147:metre.
3131:Horace
3047:, and
2752:, and
2615:Tories
2591:Adam".
2580:Cicero
2483:heresy
2381:Samson
2362:Samson
2352:. The
2307:Israel
2201:masque
2199:court
2045:Hobbes
1983:. . .
1956:ex Deo
1943:Hobbes
1919:monism
1844:quarto
1811:, the
1735:Poetry
1725:Edward
1673:Family
1580:and a
1472:, 1670
1403:Clamor
1343:martyr
1186:tracts
1151:Venice
1130:Geneva
1121:Sicily
1102:Naples
1010:Calais
911:Horton
863:, and
840:Hebrew
821:plague
672:London
614:under
591:, and
328:Poetry
321:Genres
302:Period
294:Syriac
271:French
268:Hebrew
224:
196:
165:
10825:Index
10454:Works
10441:Weber
10406:Spann
10401:Sorel
10366:Röpke
10361:Rawls
10316:Negri
10306:Mosca
10301:Mises
10266:Lenin
10236:Hoppe
10231:Hayek
10196:Fromm
10186:Evola
10176:Dugin
10073:Taine
10053:Smith
10033:Renan
10028:Paine
9949:Iqbal
9934:Hegel
9884:Comte
9874:Burke
9786:Locke
9776:James
9729:Bodin
9661:Dante
9656:Bruni
9610:Shang
9593:Plato
9147:State
9097:Power
9082:Peace
9017:Elite
8995:Terms
8675:Works
8662:Žižek
8647:Weber
8587:Röpke
8547:Negri
8527:Lasch
8497:Hoppe
8452:Fromm
8442:Evola
8422:Dewey
8402:Camus
8309:Taine
8289:Smith
8279:Royce
8269:Renan
8204:Hegel
8169:Comte
8159:Burke
8106:Locke
8040:Dante
8035:Bruni
8004:Xunzi
7979:Plato
7974:Philo
7954:Laozi
7762:Mores
7674:Multi
7664:Inter
7520:Satan
7435:(art)
7097:Poems
7046:Comus
7010:Poems
6841:Works
6581:. In
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