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Andrew Marvell
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Andrew Marvell (b. 1621–d. 1678) is today one of the best known of English 17th-century poets, his poems frequently anthologized and studied in school and university syllabi. He was born on 31 March 1621 at Winestead-in-Holderness, fourteen miles southeast of Kingston-upon-Hull. Marvell’s family moved to Hull three years later when his father, a Church of England minister, was appointed master of the Charterhouse, an almshouse for the poor just north of Hull’s town walls. Marvell attended Hull Grammar School between 1629 and 1633, leaving for Trinity College, Cambridge, in December 1633 and traveling in mainland Europe throughout the civil war years in the 1640s. Marvell’s Yorkshire connections later led him to Nun Appleton, near York, where in 1650–1652 he worked as tutor to the daughter of Thomas, Lord Fairfax, the former general of the New Model Army. He also tutored William Dutton, ward of Oliver Cromwell, and worked as a civil servant in Cromwell’s Protectorate government, assisting the poet, John Milton, in Milton’s work at the post of Latin Secretary. In 1659, Marvell was elected a Member of Parliament for Hull, a post he held until his sudden death in August 1678 of a fever he had contracted on a visit to Hull “about the Towns affaires.” Marvell’s poetry has not always been as well received as it is today. Few poems were published in his lifetime, and in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries he was better known as a political controversialist, the author of several prose pamphlets attacking establishment figures in church and state in the 1670s. T. S. Eliot’s influential essay, published in 1921, marked the rise of Marvell’s reputation as a metaphysical poet, but it also had the effect of sidelining Marvell’s political writings and parliamentary career. Recent scholarship has helped assemble a clearer picture of Marvell’s life and times, and a fuller understanding of his complex political and religious views has also helped forge better links between Marvell’s poetry and his political writings. Recent years have seen the publication of new biographies and new editions of Marvell’s complete poems and prose, helping new generations of students and scholars assemble a complete picture of this most complex of 17th-century writers.
Title: Andrew Marvell
Description:
Andrew Marvell (b.
1621–d.
1678) is today one of the best known of English 17th-century poets, his poems frequently anthologized and studied in school and university syllabi.
He was born on 31 March 1621 at Winestead-in-Holderness, fourteen miles southeast of Kingston-upon-Hull.
Marvell’s family moved to Hull three years later when his father, a Church of England minister, was appointed master of the Charterhouse, an almshouse for the poor just north of Hull’s town walls.
Marvell attended Hull Grammar School between 1629 and 1633, leaving for Trinity College, Cambridge, in December 1633 and traveling in mainland Europe throughout the civil war years in the 1640s.
Marvell’s Yorkshire connections later led him to Nun Appleton, near York, where in 1650–1652 he worked as tutor to the daughter of Thomas, Lord Fairfax, the former general of the New Model Army.
He also tutored William Dutton, ward of Oliver Cromwell, and worked as a civil servant in Cromwell’s Protectorate government, assisting the poet, John Milton, in Milton’s work at the post of Latin Secretary.
In 1659, Marvell was elected a Member of Parliament for Hull, a post he held until his sudden death in August 1678 of a fever he had contracted on a visit to Hull “about the Towns affaires.
” Marvell’s poetry has not always been as well received as it is today.
Few poems were published in his lifetime, and in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries he was better known as a political controversialist, the author of several prose pamphlets attacking establishment figures in church and state in the 1670s.
T.
S.
Eliot’s influential essay, published in 1921, marked the rise of Marvell’s reputation as a metaphysical poet, but it also had the effect of sidelining Marvell’s political writings and parliamentary career.
Recent scholarship has helped assemble a clearer picture of Marvell’s life and times, and a fuller understanding of his complex political and religious views has also helped forge better links between Marvell’s poetry and his political writings.
Recent years have seen the publication of new biographies and new editions of Marvell’s complete poems and prose, helping new generations of students and scholars assemble a complete picture of this most complex of 17th-century writers.
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The Oxford Handbook of Andrew Marvell
The Oxford Handbook of Andrew Marvell
The Oxford Handbook of Andrew Marvell offers a comprehensive introduction to Andrew Marvell (1621‒78), the poet and politician who lived and worked close to the epicentre of the re...
Imagining Andrew Marvell at 400
Imagining Andrew Marvell at 400
This volume celebrates the work of Andrew Marvell (1621-1678) in the quatercentenary year of his birth, combining the best historical scholarship with a varied and ambitious progra...
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‘Mosaic of the Air’: The Shapes of Andrew Marvell’s Poetry
‘Mosaic of the Air’: The Shapes of Andrew Marvell’s Poetry
Abstract
Whilst many scholars have discussed the particularly striking uses of imagery across Andrew Marvell’s poetry, and some have considered how he engaged with t...
Marvell and Diplomacy
Marvell and Diplomacy
This chapter examines Marvell’s diplomatic career, with a particular focus on his role as secretary to the Earl of Carlisle’s 1663 embassy to Muscovy, Sweden, and Denmark. Modern a...
Reading Marvell with John Aubrey (and occasionally Anthony Wood)
Reading Marvell with John Aubrey (and occasionally Anthony Wood)
This paper explores how the recent critical reassessment of the biographer and antiquarian John Aubrey (1626–97) and the increasing availability of his writings can revea...
Andrew Marvell’s Letters
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Marvell’s letters to friends reveal far more than the ‘gazetteering’ tones of his allegedly ‘colourless’ corporation letters. They are exceptional for their candidness, their intim...
Andrew Marvell and Education
Andrew Marvell and Education
This chapter examines Marvell’s education, from his boyhood in Hull through to his student days at Trinity College, Cambridge, to consider how these learning experiences informed t...

