Johann Adam Reinken (1623-1722
Friedrich von Flotow (1812-1883)
Serge Prokofiev (1891-1953)
Nicolas Slonimsky (1894-1995)
Guido Cantelli (1920-1956)
Igor Oistrakh (1931)
Hamish Milne (1939)
Jon Deak (1943)
Christian Zacharias (1950)
and
Edward Gibbon (1737-1794)
Mary Wollstonecraft (1759-1797)
Samuel Morse (1791-1872)
Herbert Spencer (1820-1903)
Ulysses S. Grant (1822-1885)
Ludwig Bemelmans(1898-1962)
C(ecil) Day Lewis (1904-1972)
Coretta Scott King (1927-2006)
August Wilson (1945-2005)
And from the former Writer's Almanac:
On this day in 1667, the poet John Milton sold the
copyright for his masterpiece, Paradise Lost, for 10 pounds. Milton had
championed the cause of Oliver Cromwell and the Parliament over the king
during the English Civil War, and published a series of radical
pamphlets in support of such things as Puritanism, freedom of the press,
divorce on the basis of incompatibility, and the execution of King
Charles I. With the overthrow of the monarchy and the creation of the
Commonwealth, Milton was named Secretary of Foreign Tongues, and though
he eventually lost his eyesight, he was able to carry out his duties
with the help of aides like fellow poet Andrew Marvell.
When the monarchy was restored in 1660, Milton was imprisoned as a traitor and
stripped of his property. He was soon released, but was now impoverished as well as completely blind, and he spent the rest of his life secluded in a cottage in Buckinghamshire. This is where he dictated Paradise Lost — an epic poem about the Fall of Man, with Satan as a kind of antihero — and its sequel, Paradise Regained, about the temptation of Christ.
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