The Penguin Book of Renaissance Verse: 1509-1659Penguin UK, 26.5.2005 - 976 sivua The era between the accession of Henry VIII and the crisis of the English republic in 1659 formed one of the most fertile epochs in world literature. This anthology offers a broad selection of its poetry, and includes a wide range of works by the great poets of the age - notably Sir Philip Sidney, Edmund Sepnser, John Donne, William Shakespeare and John Milton. Poems by less well-known writers also feature prominently - among them significant female poets such as Lady Mary Wroth and Katherine Philips. Compelling and exhilarating, this landmark collection illuminates a time of astonishing innovation, imagination and diversity. |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 5 kokonaismäärästä 83
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... poet as a lyricist devoted to turning his life into a work of art powerfully rejected the demands made on nineteenthcentury poets to turn their art to the causes of progress and morality. For one counter-image to the newly-created ...
... poet as a lyricist devoted to turning his life into a work of art powerfully rejected the demands made on nineteenthcentury poets to turn their art to the causes of progress and morality. For one counter-image to the newly-created ...
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... poetry appealed to those who were dissatisfied with what they saw as the dreamy abstractions of Sidney and Spenser. For William Empson and many poets and critics who began writing in the interwar period, Donne was the pattern for a ...
... poetry appealed to those who were dissatisfied with what they saw as the dreamy abstractions of Sidney and Spenser. For William Empson and many poets and critics who began writing in the interwar period, Donne was the pattern for a ...
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... poets of the New Critical canon can certainly be found here, but alongside the poised, 'mature', refined texts favoured by the New Critics can be found some rawer kinds of poetry, voices of public engagement and polemic, raw satire ...
... poets of the New Critical canon can certainly be found here, but alongside the poised, 'mature', refined texts favoured by the New Critics can be found some rawer kinds of poetry, voices of public engagement and polemic, raw satire ...
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... poets' radical experimentation with sexual norms was felt to constitute a major threat to social order. Anthologies of Renaissance love-poetry have often tended to emphasize Neoplatonic idealization at the expense of more earthy ...
... poets' radical experimentation with sexual norms was felt to constitute a major threat to social order. Anthologies of Renaissance love-poetry have often tended to emphasize Neoplatonic idealization at the expense of more earthy ...
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... poets did have an articulate and independent sense of public responsibility. Section 3 of the Introduction asks how far 'Renaissance man' was an unredeemable chauvinist, and how far 'Renaissance woman' was allowed to speak. The question ...
... poets did have an articulate and independent sense of public responsibility. Section 3 of the Introduction asks how far 'Renaissance man' was an unredeemable chauvinist, and how far 'Renaissance woman' was allowed to speak. The question ...
Sisältö
218 | |
83 | |
84 | |
The Garden | |
from The Faerie Queene Book | |
from The Faerie Queene Book | |
from Amoretti Sonnet 23 | |
ANNE DOWRICHE from The French Historie | 17 |
SIR WALTER RALEGH Praisd be Dianas faire and harmles light | 18 |
from Fortune hath taken the away my love | 19 |
QUEEN ELIZABETH I Ah silly pugge wert thou so sore afraid | 20 |
and last booke of the Ocean to Scinthia | 21 |
The | 22 |
ALEXANDER MONTGOMERIE Remembers thou in Æsope of a taill | 23 |
SIR JOHN HARINGTON A Tragicall Epigram | 24 |
Epithalamion | |
SIR WALTER RALEGH As you came from the holy land 90 SAMUEL DANIEL from Delia Sonnet 13 | |
SIR JOHN DAVIES from Gullinge Sonnets 6 | |
THOMAS NASHE The choise of valentines 96 JOHN DONNE To his Mistress going to bed 97 BARNABE BARNES from Parthenophil and Parthen... | |
WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE from Venus and Adonis 101 from Lucrece | |
RICHARD BARNFIELD from Cynthia Sonnet 8 | |
WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE from Sonnets 19 | |
from Upon Appleton House to my Lord Fairfax | liv |
A Dialogue betwixt Man and Nature | lvii |
Similizing the Sea to Meadowes and Pastures the Marriners to Shepheards the Mast to a Maypole Fishes to Beasts | lix |
KATHERINE PHILIPS Upon the graving of her Name upon a Tree in Barnelmes Walks | lx |
FRIENDS PATRONS AND THE GOOD LIFE | lxi |
Magnum vectigal parcimonia 225 Gascoignes wodmanship | lxvii |
EDWARD DE VERE EARL OF OXFORD Weare I a Kinge I coulde commande content | lxviii |
THOMAS LODGE from Scillaes Metamorphosis 228 JOHN DONNE To Sir Henry Wotton 229 THOMAS DELONEY The Weavers Song 230 THO... | lxxxiii |
THOMAS RAVENSCROFT Hey hoe what shall I say 235 Sing we now merily | lxxxvi |
A Belmans Song | lxxxvii |
THOMAS CAMPION Now winter nights enlarge 238 ANONYMOUS The Mode of France | lxxxix |
MICHAEL DRAYTON These verses weare made By Michaell Drayton Esquier Poett Lawreatt the night before hee dyed | xc |
EDMUND WALLER At Penshurst 241 RICHARD LOVELACE The Grassehopper To my Noble Friend Mr Charles Cotton | xcii |
readings of the English sixteenth century and anthologists like Arthur Symons | c |
ALEXANDER BROME from The Prisoners Written when O C attempted to be King | cix |
A Fancy | ccxiv |
GEORGE WITHER from Vox Pacifica | ccxxv |
Notes to the Text | ccxxxii |
Elizabethan period verse as he put it which celebrates all that is naturally | 9 |
GEORGE PUTTENHAM Her Majestie resembled to the crowned piller | 16 |
Of Treason | 25 |
FULKE GREVILLE LORD BROOKE from Cælica Sonnet 78 | 27 |
JOHN DONNE The Calme | 28 |
from Satire | 30 |
MARY SIDNEY COUNTESS OF PEMBROKE To Queen Elizabeth | 31 |
EDMUND SPENSER from The Faerie Queene Book | 33 |
BEN JONSON On the Union | 34 |
Index of Metrical and Stanzaic Forms | 34 |
Glossary of Classical Names | 34 |
Biographical Notes on Authors | 34 |
Index of Authors | 34 |
Index of Titles | 34 |
SIR RATHUR GORGES Written upon the death of the most Noble Prince Henrie | 35 |
SIR HENRY WOTTON Upon the sudden Restraint of the Earle of Somerset then falling from favor | 36 |
WILLIAM BROWNE from Britannias Pastorals Book | 38 |
ANONYMOUS Epitaph on the Duke of Buckingham | 39 |
SIR RICHARD FANSHAWE from An Ode Upon occasion of His Majesties Proclamation in the yeare 1630 | 40 |
JOHN CLEVELAND Epitaph on the Earl of Strafford | 41 |
SIR JOHN DENHAM Coopers Hill | 42 |
MARTIN PARKER Upon defacing of Whitehall | 43 |
ROBERT HERRICK A King and no King | 44 |
ANDREW MARVELL An Horatian Ode upon Cromwels Return from Ireland | 45 |
SIR WILLIAM MURE from The Cry of Blood and of a Broken Covenant | 46 |
KATHERINE PHILIPS On the 3 of September 1651 | 49 |
JOHN MILTON To Edward Lawrence | 243 |
KATHERINE PHILIPS Friendships Mystery To My Dearest Lucasia | 244 |
Muita painoksia - Näytä kaikki
The Penguin Book of Renaissance Verse: 1509-1659 David Norbrook,H. R. Woudhuysen Esikatselu ei käytettävissä - 1993 |
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
Andrew Marvell anthology ballad beauty Bodleian Book British Library Church Countess court Cupids dayes death delight discourse Donne’s doth earth Edition Edmund Spenser English eyes Faerie Faerie Queene faire farre feare flowers golden grace hand hart hast hath heart heav’n heaven Henry Henry Vaughan Herbert Hero humanist John Donne JOHN MILTON Jonson Jove joyes Katherine Philips King Lady Leander light live London Lord lov’d lover lyke Menston Michael Drayton Milton minde Muse never night Oxford pleasure poem poetic poetry poets political powre praise Princes printed Queene Renaissance reprinted rhetoric Robert Herrick Samuel Daniel Scolar Press facsimile selfe Shakespeare shee Shepheards shew sing sinne song Sonnets soule Spenser Sunne sweet Text thee theyr thine things thinke Thomas Thomas Carew thou thought translation tyme unto Venus verse vertue William William Shakespeare words