The Penguin Book of Renaissance Verse: 1509-1659H. R. Woudhuysen, David Norbrook Allen Lane The Penguin Press, 1992 - 910 pages |
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Page xxxiv
... lost when editors chop the manuscripts ' verse paragraphs into quatrains , and there is a similar loss in over - punctuating ; the poem is presented here in something very close to its original form . Punctuation in the Renaissance was ...
... lost when editors chop the manuscripts ' verse paragraphs into quatrains , and there is a similar loss in over - punctuating ; the poem is presented here in something very close to its original form . Punctuation in the Renaissance was ...
Page 8
... lost voices from the past . What was reborn in the Renaissance was in the first instance the culture of classical antiquity . That culture , of course , had never been entirely lost , and there had been many earlier periods of recovery ...
... lost voices from the past . What was reborn in the Renaissance was in the first instance the culture of classical antiquity . That culture , of course , had never been entirely lost , and there had been many earlier periods of recovery ...
Page 283
... lost are found againe , this never , T'is lost but once , and once lost , lost for ever . Now had the morne espy'de her lovers steeds , Whereat she starts , puts on her purple weeds , And red for anger that he stayd so long , All ...
... lost are found againe , this never , T'is lost but once , and once lost , lost for ever . Now had the morne espy'de her lovers steeds , Whereat she starts , puts on her purple weeds , And red for anger that he stayd so long , All ...
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Common terms and phrases
Æsops armes beauty brest Countess of Pembroke court Cupid dayes delight discourse Donne Donne's doth douth earth eccho ring England English eyes Faerie Queene faire farre feare flowers fortune George Puttenham golden grace Greensleeves hand hart hast hath heaven Hero humanist J. G. A. Pocock John JOHN DONNE Jove joyes Katherine Philips King Lady Lady Mary Wroth language Leander light live London Lord lovers lyke Mary Sidney minde Muse never night pleasure poem poetic poetry poets political praise Princes Queene Renaissance rhetoric seeme selfe shee Shepheards shew shining side-note Sidney sight sing Sir Philip Sidney song SONNET sorrow soule Spenser Sunne sweet tell texts thee theyr thine things thinke Thomas Nashe thos thou thought thow traditional tyme unto vallies Venus verse vertue warr weare wher woes women words
References to this book
English Literature in Context Paul Poplawski,Valerie Allen,Andrew Hiscock,Lee Morrissey No preview available - 2008 |