Often, so-called juvenilia are read only to shed light on an author’s later writing. The question of when the term “juvenilia” first comes to imply diminished literary value—meaning “immature” and perhaps “premature,” as opposed to being merely descriptive of the author’s age—is particularly relevant to a consideration of Milton at university because of the teleological approach often taken to his early works. Consequently, Milton’s Prolusions, the seven orations he delivered as a Cam-bridge student between 1627 and 1632, have often tended to be strategically mined, perceived as interesting only as precursors of what he went on to write. Besides a frequently held prejudice against juvenilia, other factors related to literary form and lingui...