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Index
Cover
Title page
Table of Contents
Notes on Contributors
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Part I: Manuscript Studies
Chapter 1: Stanford University’s Cavendish Manuscript: Wolsey, Elizabeth I, Shakespeare, and Milton
Stanford University Libraries MS M0385 CB: description and textual history
On good and bad rulership
Adaptive reuse
Acknowledgements
References
Appendix 1.1 The Justification for English Intervention in the Dutch Revolt12
Chapter 2: Texts Presented to Elizabeth I on the University Progresses
References
Chapter 3: Analysing a Private Library, with a Shelflist Attributable to John Hales of Eton, c.1624
I
II
III
Acknowledgements
References
Chapter 4: Young Milton in His Letters
Contexts
Milton’s starting point: Imitatio in Letter I to Thomas Young
Multilingualism 1: letters about poems
Multilingualism 2: Greek
Letters in verse
Letters of the Italian journey, 1638–39
The Trinity Manuscript letter
Draft One: Trinity Manuscript, page 6
Draft Two: Trinity Manuscript, page 7
Diagnosis
In conclusion
References
Chapter 5: The Itinerant Sibling: Christopher Milton in London and Suffolk
London and Berkshire parish records and others from the National Archives
Ipswich parish and hearth tax records
References
Appendix 5.1 A Christopher Milton (CM) Chronology in Ipswich
Chapter 6: Milton, the Attentive Mr Skinner, and the Acts and Discourses of Friendship
Some contexts
Special acts and recognitions
Ireland
The discourse of the 'Life’
Afterword
References
Part II: Printed Books
Chapter 7: Printing the Gospels in Arabic in Rome in 1590
Acknowledgements
References
Chapter 8: Tyranny and Tragicomedy in Milton’s Reading of The Tempest
References
Chapter 9: The Earliest Miltonists: Patrick Hume and John Toland
References
Chapter 10: The Ghost of Rhetoric: Milton’s Logic and the Renaissance Trivium
References
Part III: Production, Dissemination, Appropriation
Chapter 11: Misprinting Bartholomew Fair: Jonson and 'The Absolute Knave'
References
Chapter 12: Reliquiae Baxterianae and the Shaping of the Seventeenth Century
References
Chapter 13: Marvell and the Dutch in 1665
Acknowledgements
References
Chapter 14: Did Milton Read Selden?
References
Chapter 15: Hands On
Mirror Neurones
Caravaggio
Pointing Hands
The Reading Hand
Anatomy
Claude Verdan
John Donne
Milton
It’s Alive!
References
Chapter 16: Shakespeare with a Difference: Dismembering and Remembering Titus Andronicus in Heiner Müller’s and Brigitte Maria Mayer’s Anatomie Titus
Acknowledgements
References
By Ferry, Foot, and Fate: A Tour in the Hebrides
Index
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