With an Introduction by
Antonia Till
John Milton(1608-1674) poet and polemicist, is best remembered for
his monumental work Paradise Lost(1667 and 1674) which marks the apogee
of the poet's religious and political convictions. However, Milton's
earlier poems had already marked him for greatness, and include On
the Morning of Christ's Nativity, L'Allegro. Il Penseroso, Lycidas
and two masques Arcades and Comus.
The second period of Milton's life was absorbed in his support for
political liberty espoused by the Parliamentarian Party during the
Civil War, and saw the composition of poetry largely overtaken by a
series of brilliant and fierce pamphlets which include the famous defence
of literature in Areopagitica(1644). Milton's final period was one
of great unhappiness during which his young wife abandoned him and
his eyesight failed. He died from gout and is buried in St Giles, Cripplegate
in London.