1st Edition

Andrew Marvell

By Thomas Healy Copyright 1999
    222 Pages
    by Routledge

    222 Pages
    by Routledge

    Andrew Marvell brings together ten recent and critically informed essays by leading scholars on one of the most challenging and important seventeenth-century poets. The essays examine Marvell's poems, from lyrics, such as 'To His Coy Mistress' and 'The Nymph Complaining for the Death of her Fawn', to celebrations of Cromwell and Republican Civil War culture and his biting Restoration satires. Representing the most significant critical trends in Marvell criticism over the last twenty years, the essays and the authoritative editorial work provide an excellent introduction to Marvell's work.

    Students of Renaissance and seventeenth-century literature, English Civil War writing, and seventeenth-century social and cultural history will find this collection a useful guide to helping them appreciate and understand Marvell's poetry.

    General Editors' Preface.  Acknowledgements.  Introduction.  1. Warren Chernaik, "The Poet's Time"  2. Francis Baker, "Into the Vault"  3. Jonathan Goldberg, "Marvell's nymph and the echo of voice"  4. Jonathan Crewe, "The Garden State: Marvell's Poetic of Enclosure"  5. Leah S. Marcus, "Pastimes with a Court"  6. Blair Worden, "Andrew Marvell, Oliver Cromwell, and the Horatian Ode"  7. David Nordbrook, "Marvell's Horation Ode and the politics of genre"  8. Annabel Patterson, "So with more modesty we may be trye": Marvell;s poems on Cromwell  9. Steven N. Zwicker, "Virgins and Whores: the Politics of Sexual Misconduct in the 1660s"  10. Paul Hammond, "Marvell's Sexuality"   Notes on the Authors.  Further Reading.  Index

    Biography

    Thomas Healy