The Chivalric Tradition in Renaissance EnglandFolger Shakespeare Library, 1986 - 184 pagine |
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Pagina 72
... Courtier , since 1561 available in Thomas Hoby's great translation . There they could read not only that " the chief ... courtiers were able not only to revive the courtly tradition , but to maintain its essential connection with the ...
... Courtier , since 1561 available in Thomas Hoby's great translation . There they could read not only that " the chief ... courtiers were able not only to revive the courtly tradition , but to maintain its essential connection with the ...
Pagina 104
... courtiers he had nothing good to say whatever . Geoffrey Gates was more uncompromising . In his Defence of Militarie ... courtier himself , the kind of carpet knight whom Hotspur en- countered after a hard - fought battle , that ...
... courtiers he had nothing good to say whatever . Geoffrey Gates was more uncompromising . In his Defence of Militarie ... courtier himself , the kind of carpet knight whom Hotspur en- countered after a hard - fought battle , that ...
Pagina 143
... courtiers and gentlemen to think of themselves as knights - errant . The England James I entered was no longer the England of Sidney and Spenser . It was less roman- tic , more critical , even disillusioned . The nation was no longer ...
... courtiers and gentlemen to think of themselves as knights - errant . The England James I entered was no longer the England of Sidney and Spenser . It was less roman- tic , more critical , even disillusioned . The nation was no longer ...
Sommario
Introduction | 11 |
Chivalry and the Early Tudor State | 45 |
The Elizabethan Revival | 66 |
Copyright | |
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Parole e frasi comuni
abethan Accession Day Accession Day Tilts Allegory Alliterative Morte Arthure alry antiquity appears Arcadia aristocracy Arthur Arthurian aspiration become Boke Burgundian Cambridge Caxton century chap chiv chivalric idealism chivalric revival chivalric romance chivalric themes chivalric tradition chivalric values Christine de Pisan civic classical contemporary context court courtiers courtly courtly love culture duel Early Tudor Edited Edmund Spenser Eliz Elizabethan revival Elyot England English especially essentially fact Faerie Queene fifteenth-century gentleman gentry Henry heroes honor humanism humanist Ibid increasingly Inigo Jones John jousting king knight-errant knight-errantry knighthood knightly late medieval learning literature London Malory Malory's martial medieval medieval chivalry Middle Ages military Morte Darthur mystique nonchivalric Ordre of Chyualry Oxford pageantry pageants pastoral political Prince profession remained revival of chivalry Roy Strong sense Shakespeare Sidney's Sir Philip Sidney Sir Thomas social society Spenser story symbols Tamburlaine things tion tournament valric Vinaver virtue vols