Andrew Marvell The Chameleon Nigel Smith

Format:
Paperback
Publication date:
20 Mar 2012
ISBN:
9780300181968
Dimensions:
416 pages: 229 x 149 x 32mm
Illustrations:
16 black-&-white illustrations

The seventeenth-century poet Andrew Marvell (1621-1678) is one of the most intriguing figures in English literature. A noted civil servant under Cromwell's Protectorate, he has been variously identified as a patriot, spy, conspirator, concealed homosexual, father to the liberal tradition, and incendiary satirical pamphleteer and freethinker. But while Marvell's poetry has attracted a wide modern following, his prose is known only to specialists, and much of his personal life remains shrouded in mystery. Nigel Smith's pivotal biography provides an unparalleled look into Marvell's life, from his early employment as a tutor and gentleman's companion to his suspicious death, reputedly a politically fueled poisoning. Drawing on exhaustive archival research, the voluminous corpus of Marvell's previously little known writing, and recent scholarship across several disciplines, Smith's portrait becomes the definitive account of this elusive life.

Extract

Read an extract from Andrew Marvell: The Chameleon on Yale's blog


Nigel Smith is Professor of English and Chair of the Committee for Renaissance Studies at Princeton University. A leading expert on Andrew Marvell as well as on the political literature of the Civil War and Interregnum, he has published widely on the seventeenth century. He brought out the Longman Annotated edition of Marvell's poetry, and is the author of Literature and Revolution (published by Yale) and Is Milton Better than Shakespeare?.

"The remarkable depth of Nigel Smith's research makes new sense of a celebratedly elusive writer."-David Norbrook, author of Poetry and Politics in the English Renaissance

"Smith delivers fresh insights into Marvell's experiences and character... a fascinating psychological portrait of Marvell."-Helen Hackett, Times Literary Supplement

"Engaging, intensely researched... Smith is very good on the historical and political contexts surrounding Marvell... Smith's book is a welcome contribution to Marvell studies."-Nick Laird, Daily Telegraph

"The result of Smith's scholarly close readings is a refreshed and refined sense of Marvell's poetry, and his biography should be a standard point of reference for future Marvellians."-John Stubbs, Literary Review

"This context of danger, where revelations of identity can mean a beheading, permeates the poet’s literary as well as his political work, as this scholarly biography shows."–Sunday Herald (Glasgow)