“…The questions posed by Corns and Maley have retained a currency ever since and are echoed and responded to by Stevens (), Daems (), Gregerson (), Raymond (), Fenton (), Lim (), and McDowell (, , ), all of whom tackle the subject of Milton's writings about the Irish dimension to the Wars of the Three Kingdoms and the issues of colonialism, plantation, empire, nationhood, and identity that it raises. With the exception of Elizabeth Sauer, who explores the topic of English Protestant nationalism and the corresponding crisis in Ireland through the lens of Milton's sonnet “On the Late Massacre in Piedmont” (Sauer, ), the overwhelming emphasis is placed on Milton's prose works of the 1640s, especially the antiprelatical tracts (1641–1642), the Observations upon the Articles of Peace (1649), and Eikonoklastes (1649).…”