Writing the English Republic: Poetry, Rhetoric and Politics, 1627-1660This magisterial new history of seventeenth-century republican political culture sets key texts by Marvell and Milton in a richly detailed context, showing how writers re-imagined English political and literary culture without kingship. The book draws on extensive archival research, bringing to light exciting and neglected manuscript and printed sources. Offering a bold new narrative of the whole period, and a timely reminder that England has a republican as well as royalist heritage, it will be of compelling interest to historians as well as literary scholars. |
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Page ix
... tion of the staff of the Cambridge , Leeds and Newcastle University Libraries , the Oxford University English and History Faculty Libraries , the Hartlib Papers Project , the University of Sheffield , the Public Record Office , the ...
... tion of the staff of the Cambridge , Leeds and Newcastle University Libraries , the Oxford University English and History Faculty Libraries , the Hartlib Papers Project , the University of Sheffield , the Public Record Office , the ...
Page 4
... tion that has been paid to court culture . One point this book tries to empha- size is that what has been referred to as the Augustan era of English poetry , initiated in 1660 and brought to perfection with Dryden's Aeneid ( 1697 ) ...
... tion that has been paid to court culture . One point this book tries to empha- size is that what has been referred to as the Augustan era of English poetry , initiated in 1660 and brought to perfection with Dryden's Aeneid ( 1697 ) ...
Page 19
... tion has a built - in momentum towards an openness of dialogue that can escape the distortions of social and political inequities.53 Once openness of communication is privileged over traditional hierarchies and mysteries of state ...
... tion has a built - in momentum towards an openness of dialogue that can escape the distortions of social and political inequities.53 Once openness of communication is privileged over traditional hierarchies and mysteries of state ...
Page 23
... tion . One of the leading Parliamentarians , Bulstrode Whitelocke , rose in the House of Commons to warn of the dangers ahead . He quoted from the begin- ning of Lucan's Pharsalia : Bella per Emathios plus quam civilia campos , Iusque ...
... tion . One of the leading Parliamentarians , Bulstrode Whitelocke , rose in the House of Commons to warn of the dangers ahead . He quoted from the begin- ning of Lucan's Pharsalia : Bella per Emathios plus quam civilia campos , Iusque ...
Page 34
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Writing the English Republic: Poetry, Rhetoric, and Politics, 1627-1660 David Norbrook No preview available - 1999 |
Common terms and phrases
Aeneid Andrew Marvell appeared Areopagitica attacks Augustan become Bodleian Caesar Cambridge cause celebrated Charles Charles's civil claim classical Commonwealth court courtly critics Cromwell Cromwell's Cromwellian culture death declared Defence discourse echoes edition elegy England English English Civil War epic George Wither Hall Hall's Harrington Hartlib Henry Marten Hobbes Horatian Ode imagery interest James Harrington John John Milton king king's kingship language liberty literary London Long Parliament Lucan Ludlow Machiavellian Marchamont Nedham Marten Marvell's May's Mercurius Politicus military Milton monarchist monarchy Nedham newsbook Oxford pamphlet Paradise Lost parallel Parliamentarian peace Pharsalia poem poem's poet poetic poetry political Pompey praise Presbyterians present Prince Protectorate public sphere Puritan radical readers reading reform regicide regime religious republic republic's republican Restoration rhetoric Roman Rome royal royalist Satan satire seems seen speech speech-act Stuart sublime Thomas tion traditional translation verse Virgil virtue Waller writing