How Milton's Rhythms Work
How Milton’s Rhythms Work Michael Taylor Senior Honors Thesis: Stanford University Department of English Advised by Professor Blair Hoxby Second Reader: Professor Roland Greene May 15, 2015 Acknowledgments The person who most influenced the contents of this thesis told me her favorite dedication was John Steinbeck’s at the opening of East of Eden. In it, Steinbeck talks of his work as of a small wooden box. He tells his friend Pat that “nearly everything I have is in it, and it is not full.” This page is to acknowledge two things: first, that the box of this thesis is far from full, no matter how much I have put into it. And second, that much of what has found its way into this box would have fallen astray, were it not for the people who have supported me in various ways, both throughout my life and throughout the past year. First of all, I owe a special kind of respect and thanks to my advisor, Blair Hoxby. Not only has he read many more pages than appear in this thesis, and not only has he read many more pages than I could have expected even the most engaged advisor to read; he has also done this with a patience and care for which I have a deep, deep gratitude. I also want to thank Erik Johnson, my graduate mentor, for his part in this project. Theses are like boxes in many ways, but one way in which theses are very different is that they have due dates. Thank you, Erik, for providing valuable feedback, for sharing your considerable expertise with someone who needed it, and, most of all, for keeping me on track.
[Show full text]