In narrative and some 120 pictures, Don M. Wolfe traces Milton's life in the context of the public events and common scenes of his time. His illustrations and vignettes, supported by passages from the history of the period as well as the poet's own writings, bring to life the people, politics, and society of seventeenth-century England: maidens carrying fresh cream and cheese on their heads, men with hats and caps to sell; the Long Parliament of 1640; Charles I's summary trial and execution; Cromwell's Protectorate; the London Plague of 1665 and the Great Fire of 1666; the publication ofParadise Lost.
The principal figure is, of course, John Milton, seen first as a boy of ten, sober and confident, even then a poet. He is seen also as a traveler to the continent in 1638-1639, when he filled his mind with scenes and places that he would use inParadise Lost: the sulphuric Phlegraean Fields outside Naples; Galileo, the Tuscan artist with optic glass. Milton the revolutionary is described, the libertarian pamphleteer whose passionate cry that every man had the right to know, to utter, to argue freely was realized around the campfires of the New Model Army. Throughout, Milton is depicted also as the poet aspiring to leave something so written to aftertimes, as they should not willingly let it die his creative genius coming forth at last inParadise Lostand his final major work,Samson Agonistes.
Originally published in 1971.
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