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Milton: Poet, Pamphleteer and Patriot by…
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Milton: Poet, Pamphleteer and Patriot (original 2008; edition 2008)

by Anna Beer

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1593171,463 (3.81)6
A fresh account of the life, times, politics, loves, and letters of the great English poet. One of the world's great poets, author of the epic Paradise Lost as well as numerous other works, Milton was also deeply involved in the political and religious controversies of his time. Fully immersed in the new and rapidly changing print culture, Milton wrote a series of radical pamphlets on free speech, divorce, and religious, political, and social rights that proposed a complete rethinking of the nature and practice not only of government, but of human freedom itself. Having put his pen at the service of Cromwell's new Commonwealth, when the Restoration came Milton was lucky to escape with his life. Blind by then, he persevered, creating the majestic works that made him immortal. Meanwhile, his personal life was as rich and complex as his professional one, and author Beer illuminates the whole.--From publisher description.… (more)
Member:riverwillow
Title:Milton: Poet, Pamphleteer and Patriot
Authors:Anna Beer
Info:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC (2008), Edition: illustrated edition, Hardcover, 480 pages
Collections:Reviewed, Course, Read but unowned
Rating:***1/2
Tags:Reference, Non-Fiction, Biography/Memoir, A815

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Milton: Poet, Pamphleteer, and Patriot by Anna Beer (2008)

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Milton's a difficult subject for a biography. We know more about him than any other major writer of the 17th century, given his involvement in revolutionary politics and his employment as Latin Secretary by the commonwealth's Council of State. Yet so much of what we know is only the outer Milton, the public Milton – and also the persona that Milton chooses to disclose of himself in autobiographical snippets within the polemical pamphlets. Beer delivers a decent biographical presentation, and her discussion of the polemical essays is particularly valuable.

If your interest is the poetry, through, you'd be better off reading the supplementary materials in the two Norton Critical volumes because Beer's discussion of the poetry is at a fairly elementary level. ( )
  CurrerBell | Jul 6, 2017 |
I finished Anna Beer's biography with mixed feelings but an overall sense of satisfaction. I think most people would call the book "workmanlike." It isn't inspired writing.

On the other hand, Beer demonstrates restraint and circumspection about her subject--something that these days seems wholly lacking in the biography genre. Her discussion of Milton's friendship with Charles Diodati, and its homosexual undertones, for example, was a model of reasonable analysis. She maintains this tone of detached objectivity whenever she's discussing Milton's personal relationships--with his wives, his daughters, etc. She acknowledges prevailing theories about which marriages were "happy" and which weren't, what he felt or didn't feel for his daughters, but does not shy away from pointing out any evidence that contradicts the current prevailing theories (or romantic notions). She points out, for example, that John Milton's liberal "Of Education" --often used as evidence for the fact that he went above and beyond to educate his daughters--was written specifically as a program of education for boys and can hardly be seen as his views on the education of women.

Where the book really shines is in Beer's discussions of Milton's publications. It is really an intellectual, political biography of the man. Beer's primary interest is in the evolution of Milton's political philosophy, his radical individualism. And here she is very, very good. She documents every major (and most minor) publications he
wrote ("Pamphleteer" indeed!), assessing them against the political and religious climate of the times, and Milton's
own social standings and ambitions. The book is worth reading just for the chapter about Areopagitica -- Milton's
defense of free speech--alone.
  southernbooklady | Jun 26, 2016 |
This is a well-researched, if somewhat dry, biography of Milton. To be fair to Anna Beer, little is known of Milton's personal life which Beer find frustrating and makes it hard for any biographer to get close to the man behind the poems and the tracts, but Beer's solution of quoting from contemporary texts has the effect of distancing the reader from its subject. However her literary analysis of the major works is fascinating, the section on 'Paradise Lost' is particularly informative, and this is what lifts this book above the average. ( )
  riverwillow | Aug 1, 2010 |
Showing 3 of 3
This is a valuable and authoritative book, scrupulously researched and edited; the footnotes are often fascinating in themselves. Beer's literary-critical passages benefit from modern scholarship, which she frequently quotes, and she is particularly good on the complex political undercurrents in Paradise Lost, whose title alone was a provocation to those who wished to forget England's brief experiment with republicanism and toleration.
 
What is less clear, until it puts forth its gorgeous evidence in the last part of his life, is the extent to which Milton's early abilities to mix rational intelligence with symbolic power had survived this long middle of his career. But Paradise Lost, and to a different extent Paradise Regained and Samson Agonistes, prove that this aspect of his genius had not simply been protected during his poetic silence, it had radically matured. There is no great climax of public approbation to Beer's book, no softened rehabilitation, and no evidence of eventual domestic harmony. There is just the great poem, with its peerless combinations of imaginative reach and political analysis, its profoundly subtle enquiries into the nature of our relationship with the divine, its marvellous organ-blast hymn to (and the plea for vigilant support of) liberty. It's a crucial part of the biographer's job to lead readers back through the life to the work. Beer does this very steadily and very well, and thereby gives Milton the anniversary present he deserves.
 
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For my mother, Margaret Beer, and in memory of my father, John Beer, 1922-1989, and my grandmother, Anna Beer, 1901-1942.
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On 20 December 1608, in the heart of the City of London, a baby boy was baptised in All Hallows Church, on the corner of the ancient Roman thoroughfare of Watling Street and narrow Bread Street.
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A fresh account of the life, times, politics, loves, and letters of the great English poet. One of the world's great poets, author of the epic Paradise Lost as well as numerous other works, Milton was also deeply involved in the political and religious controversies of his time. Fully immersed in the new and rapidly changing print culture, Milton wrote a series of radical pamphlets on free speech, divorce, and religious, political, and social rights that proposed a complete rethinking of the nature and practice not only of government, but of human freedom itself. Having put his pen at the service of Cromwell's new Commonwealth, when the Restoration came Milton was lucky to escape with his life. Blind by then, he persevered, creating the majestic works that made him immortal. Meanwhile, his personal life was as rich and complex as his professional one, and author Beer illuminates the whole.--From publisher description.

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