John Selden: Scholar, Statesman, Advocate for Milton's Muse
Jason P. Rosenblatt (Emeritus Professor of English, Georgetown University)
John Selden: Scholar, Statesman, Advocate for Milton’s Muse
Jason P. Rosenblatt (Emeritus Professor of English, Georgetown University)
The life of John Selden (1584-1654) was both contemplative and active. Seventeenth-century England’s most learned person, he was also one of the few survivors who continued in the Long Parliament of the 1640s his vigorous opposition, begun in the 1620s, to abuses of power, whether by Charles I or, later, by the Presbyterian-controlled Westminster Assembly. His gift for finding analogies among different cultures–Greco-Roman, Christian, Jewish, and Islamic–helped to transform both the poetry and prose of the century’s greatest poet, John Milton. Although Selden was very active in the Long Parliament, his only surviving debates from that decade were as a lay member of the Westminster Assembly of Divines. The Assembly’s scribe left so many gaps that the transcript is sometimes indecipherable. This book fills in the gaps and makes the speeches coherent by finding their contexts in Selden’s printed works, both the scholarly, as in the massive De Synedriis, but also in the witty and informal Table Talk.
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