<p>Appearing in tandem with the publication of an authoritative text of the first edition of John Milton&#8217;s <i>Paradise Lost</i> these insightful essays by ten Miltonists establish the significant differences between the text context and effect of the poem&#8217;s first edition (1667) and those of the now-standard second edition. In bringing together essays by various hands editors Michael Lieb and John T. Shawcross seek to map what may be termed a new frontier in Milton studies one that acknowledges the importance of what Milton himself considered to be the work of a lifetime when he offered <i>Paradise Lost</i> to readers in 1667.</p><p>While the scholars writing here do not claim that the first edition of Milton&#8217;s epic should be viewed as supplanting the second and later editions they do seek to demonstrate the importance of coming to terms with the original ten-book edition both as a work with its own identity and value and as a source of fundamental insight into the nature of the editions that would follow in its wake. <i>Paradise Lost</i> cannot be fully understood without an awareness of the dynamic and ever-changing nature of the forces through which it made its first and subsequent appearances in the world at large.</p>
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