`Too intellectual a poet ever to be popular': Herman Melville and the Miltonic dimension of 'Clarel.'(Critical Essay)

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From: Leviathan
Date: 20020301
Author:Shawcross, John T.

That Herman Melville read widely and employed various authors in his own work has been long established. That one of those authors was John Milton has been demonstrated for such novels as Typee (1846), Moby-Dick (1851), The Confidence-Man (1857), and Billy Budd (written in the late 1880s), among other works. (1) Melville's copy of Milton's poetical works with extensive annotations is owned by Princeton University Library; its annotations on Paradise Regain'd and Samson Agonistes have been scrutinized for their importance in relating Milton's doubting and heretical views of ...

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