Dragon's Teeth: Literature in the English Revolution"Books," wrote Milton, "are like dragon's teeth that spring up armed men." This study looks at some of the armed men that Milton, Marvell, Browne, and Butler sent off to fight, reading a series of 17th-century literary texts against the historical and political backdrop of the English Revolution. Confronting the formalist taboo on historical and political context, Wilding provides many challenging new readings, exploring issues of war and peace, of economic exploitation, social repression and the radical politics of the Levellers and Diggers. The issues that resulted in revolution three centuries ago are still relevant today, as Wilding persuasively demonstrates in a collection that will interest scholars and students of English literature, history, and political science. |
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Page 24
... labour is delight . It is a vision like William Morris's haymaking in News from Nowhere ; fulfilling , enjoyable.33 Yet the exhausting quality of the labour is not repressed : this is not a false or purely decorative pastoral . To read ...
... labour is delight . It is a vision like William Morris's haymaking in News from Nowhere ; fulfilling , enjoyable.33 Yet the exhausting quality of the labour is not repressed : this is not a false or purely decorative pastoral . To read ...
Page 26
... labour . All nature labours : human male and female - ploughman and milkmaid ; the labouring clouds ; the insect world , the bee , type and reminder of human social labour here as in Marvell's ' The Garden ' ; and the supernatural world .
... labour . All nature labours : human male and female - ploughman and milkmaid ; the labouring clouds ; the insect world , the bee , type and reminder of human social labour here as in Marvell's ' The Garden ' ; and the supernatural world .
Page 73
... labour of the poor is proportionably dear : And scarce to be had at all ( so licentious are they who labour only to eat , or rather to drink . ) ” 97 The Variorum notes that the ' green shops ' of Comus's speech are ' the mulberry trees ...
... labour of the poor is proportionably dear : And scarce to be had at all ( so licentious are they who labour only to eat , or rather to drink . ) ” 97 The Variorum notes that the ' green shops ' of Comus's speech are ' the mulberry trees ...
Contents
List of abbreviations | 1 |
Politics | 28 |
Religio Medici in the English Revolution | 89 |
Copyright | |
6 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
A. H. Dodd Adam allusion ambiguity Andrew Marvell Antichrist Appleton House army attack bishops blindness Brooks Browne Browne's Butler Cambridge campaign charity Charles Christ Christian Christopher Hill church Civil classical Cleanth Brooks clergy common Comus Comus's contemporary context corruption Council Court critical Cromwell Cromwell's debate devils divine England English Revolution epic established evil glory Harmondsworth hath Heaven Hell hero heroic Horatian Ode Hudibras Ibid implications Ireland John Milton King labour Lady land Levellers liberty literary London Lord Fairfax Lord President Ludlow Lycidas Marches Marvell's Maske masque meaning Michael Wilding military monarchical moral multitude nunnery Oxford pagan Paradise Lost Paradise Regained Parliament parliamentary passage poem poet Poetry political presented Prince Puritan radical reference rejection Religio Medici religious remarks retirement revolutionary Royalist Samson Satan seventeenth century shepherd social spirit stress T. S. Eliot Thomas thou traditional tyrant vision Wales Welsh William writes wrote