
It took a long time for Marvell's fame as a poet to match, and then to eclipse, his celebrity as a politician and defender of civil liberties, but in the present century he has been regarded as perhaps the most important seventeenth-century poet after his friend John Milton. His poems were published postumously in 1681, and there is important additional material in the Bodleian Library, Oxford. The present edition, though drawing on the Oxford English Text edition of Margoliouth as revixed by Legouis, offers a new recension of the text and, since the poetry sometims calls for it, unobtrusive explanatory annotation. Marvell's powers as a prose satirist are represented by the first book of "The Rehearsal Transprosed".
This volume investigates the literary and political legacy of Andrew Marvell, positioning him as a central figure in seventeenth-century English letters. The editor provides a scholarly recension of Marvell's posthumously published poetry and prose, utilizing the foundational Oxford English Text editions as a base. By including both his celebrated verse and his significant political satire, the book argues for a holistic understanding of Marvell as both a poet and a defender of civil liberties.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and students frequently cite this edition as a reliable and accessible resource for studying Marvell's dual identity as a poet and political writer. The inclusion of both verse and prose is widely regarded as a helpful approach for those seeking to understand the breadth of his seventeenth-century influence.
Page Count:
362
Publication Date:
1990-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192541838
ISBN-13:
9780192541833
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!