Ben Jonson and the Poetics of Patronage |
Contents
Preface | 9 |
Poets and the Psychology of Patronage | 23 |
Issues of Flattery and Freedom | 59 |
Copyright | |
8 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
ambiguous ambition anxiety appealing assert attacks attractive audience Bacon behavior Ben Jonson Cambridge Cecil celebrates character claims competition concern context Countess Countess of Bedford court courtly criticism Cynthia's Revels dependent discussion Earl effect Egerton emphasizes English English Studies enhance envy epigram epistle Essays exploit fact flatterers Francis Bacon friends friendship helps Hymenaei ideal implicitly important inevitably influence Inigo Jones insecurity instance interests Jacobean James James's Jones Jonson seems Jonson's poems Jonson's poetry King less literary London Lord Love Restored masques micropolitical moral motives one's ostensibly paradoxically partly patronage poet patrons Pebworth Pembroke Pembroke's Penshurst plays Plutarch poem's poet's poetic political praise precisely present promote readers relations Renaissance reputation rivals role Rutland satire Satiromastix Sejanus self-consciousness self-promotion sense Sidney social status Stephen Orgel Studies subtle suggests superiors tactics tensions thou tion tone Tribe of Ben University Press Virbius virtue Volpone William writing