The Cambridge Companion to English Poetry, Donne to MarvellThomas N. Corns Cambridge University Press, 18 նոյ, 1993 թ. English poetry in the first half of the seventeenth century is an outstandingly rich and varied body of verse, which can be understood and appreciated more fully when set in its cultural and ideological context. This student Companion, consisting of fourteen new introductory essays by scholars of international standing, informs and illuminates the poetry by providing close reading of texts and an exploration of their background. There are individual studies of Donne, Jonson, Herrick, Herbert, Carew, Suckling, Lovelace, Milton, Crashaw, Vaughan and Marvell. More general essays describe the political and religious context of the poetry, explore its gender politics, explain the material circumstances of its production and circulation, trace its larger role in the development of genre and tradition, and relate it to contemporary rhetorical expectation. Overall the Companion provides an indispensable guide to the texts and contexts of early-seventeenth-century English poetry. |
From inside the book
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... praising Stuart kingship, believed the poet had an essential role to play in the state; Herbert and Herrick both served as priests in the Anglican Church; Crashaw wrote extravagant poetry displaying his highchurch sympathies; Lovelace ...
... praising Stuart kingship, believed the poet had an essential role to play in the state; Herbert and Herrick both served as priests in the Anglican Church; Crashaw wrote extravagant poetry displaying his highchurch sympathies; Lovelace ...
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... praising ideal kingship in James – whomhe treats as both the 'best of Kings' and the 'best of Poets' epigram – in his Jonson develops one of his numerous analogies between poets and princes: 'I could never thinke the study of Wisdome ...
... praising ideal kingship in James – whomhe treats as both the 'best of Kings' and the 'best of Poets' epigram – in his Jonson develops one of his numerous analogies between poets and princes: 'I could never thinke the study of Wisdome ...
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... praise,and blame; by shapingpolitical values and perceptions; andby creatingpowerful fictions (including masques in ... praises the nobility,which James considered essentialtohis absolutist hierarchy, a discriminating Jonson does not ...
... praise,and blame; by shapingpolitical values and perceptions; andby creatingpowerful fictions (including masques in ... praises the nobility,which James considered essentialtohis absolutist hierarchy, a discriminating Jonson does not ...
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... praise, counsel, and serve the Stuart aristocracy, was hostile to Puritan apocalypticism – the kind of prophetic strain noticeable in the visionary poetry of Milton's 'Lycidas' (1637), a passionately anticlericaland antiLaudian work ...
... praise, counsel, and serve the Stuart aristocracy, was hostile to Puritan apocalypticism – the kind of prophetic strain noticeable in the visionary poetry of Milton's 'Lycidas' (1637), a passionately anticlericaland antiLaudian work ...
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... praise of a foreign and potentially hostile monarch: 'Heseems aKingbylong Succession born, And yet thesametobe a Kingdoes scorn. Abroad a King he seems, and somethingmore, AtHome a Subjecton the equalFloor.' (lines 387– 90) Besides ...
... praise of a foreign and potentially hostile monarch: 'Heseems aKingbylong Succession born, And yet thesametobe a Kingdoes scorn. Abroad a King he seems, and somethingmore, AtHome a Subjecton the equalFloor.' (lines 387– 90) Besides ...
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andthe anthologies asthe atthe Ben Jonson Birth bythe Cambridge Carew celebration century Charles Christ Christopher Hill Church Clarendon Press classical collection court courtly Crashaw critical Cromwell culture Death devotion divine Donne's edition elegies England English English Poetry epigram expression fromthe genre George Herbert georgic Henry Vaughan Herrick Hesperides human inhis inthe inthis itis John Donne Jonson Katherine Philips King language lines literary Literature London Lord Lovelace lover Lycidas lyric manuscript Marvell Marvell's masque metaphors Milton miscellanies mistress monarch muse ofhis oflove ofthe onthe Oxford pastoral poem's poems poet poet's poetic poetry political praise Protestant Puritan Quintilian religious Renaissance rhetoric Richard Richard Crashaw Richard Lovelace Robert Robert Herrick royalist satiric seventeenth seventeenthcentury sexual social song sonnet soul speaker spiritual stanza Suckling Temple thatthe thepoem Thomas Thomas Carew thou tobe tothe tradition University Press virtue withthe woman women writing