Tudor Verse Satire
β Scribed by K. W. Gransden (editor)
- Publisher
- Bloomsbury Academic
- Year
- 2013
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 184
- Series
- Bloomsbury Academic Collections: English Literary Criticism
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This volume brings together examples of English verse satire written during the sixteenth and early seventeenth century, interpreting satire widely to include reflective poems modelled on Horace, βaggressiveβ poems modelled on Juvenal, and poems in the native or medieval tradition. There are substantial extracts from the anonymous Cock Lorellβs Boat, Skeltonβs Colin Clout and Spenserβs Mother Hubberdβs Tale, but most poems are given complete. Among other poets represented are Wyatt, Donne, Marston and Jonson and a number of pieces have been included by writers whose work is today not readily accessible, such as Gascoigne, Lodge, Rowlands and Guilpin. The nature and development of verse satire as a literary genre is discussed in the introduction.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
This varied collection of satirical verse contains 232 selections by writers from John Skelton and John Donne to Louis MacNeice and Clive James. Grigson--a well-known poet and critic--has chosen verse by such master satirists as John Dryden, Jonathan Swift, Alexander Pope, Charles Churchill, and L
<p>Looks at the popular interest in military books and the narrative verse to familiarize the reader of today with what the 16th century reader and theatergoer was likely to know of military matters.</p>