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Book Chapter

"Nothing nobler then a free Commonwealth": Milton's Later Vernacular Republican Tracts

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Citation

Keeble N (2009) "Nothing nobler then a free Commonwealth": Milton's Later Vernacular Republican Tracts. In: McDowell N & Smith N (eds.) The Oxford Handbook of Milton. Oxford Handbooks of Literature. New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 305-324. http://ukcatalogue.oup.com/product/9780199210886.do?keyword=milton&sortby=bestMatches

Abstract
First paragraph: ¡®Cromwell, our chief of men¡¯:2 in the early 1650s Milton shared with a large body of radical and republican opinion in England an admiration for Oliver Cromwell as the agent of religious and political transformation. ¡®Brave¡¯ Cromwell, the conqueror of Ireland, had figured in the Defence of the English People of 1651 (4.1:458), and in the Second Defence of 1654, in which Milton takes the insult that he is ¡®¡°worse than Cromwell¡±¡¯ as ¡®the highest praise you could bestow on me¡¯ (4.1:595), the Lord Protector is famously eulogised as the one man upon whom the state depends (4.1:666-72). 3 Thereafter, however, Milton kept his counsel. His silence on the occasion of Cromwell¡¯s death on 3 September 1658, and, apparently, for the four preceding years, has exercised commentators concerned to determine whether Milton¡¯s earlier laudatory view of Cromwell survived the experience of the Protector¡¯s later rule, with its Privy Council, second chamber indistinguishable from a House of Lords, courtly etiquette and increasingly monarchical characteristics. Though some have held that it did,4 the prevailing view has been that Milton¡¯s silence betokens disillusion.5

Keywords
Milton, John; Republicanism; Restoration; Prose tracts; English literature Early modern, 1500-1700 History and criticism; Royalists in literature; Milton, John, 1608-1674 Political and social views; Republicanism Great Britain History 17th century

StatusPublished
Title of seriesOxford Handbooks of Literature
Publication date31/12/2009
URL
PublisherOxford University Press
Publisher URL
Place of publicationNew York
ISBN978-0-19-921088-6

People (1)

Professor Neil Keeble

Professor Neil Keeble

Emeritus Professor, English Studies