Ceremony and Civility in English Renaissance Prose |
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Contents
CLASSICAL CIVILITY AND MEDIEVAL CEREMONY | 21 |
EARLY TUDOR PROSE AND CIVIL HISTORY | 53 |
Early Tudor Prose | 63 |
Dialogue Proverb and Irony | 73 |
Mores Cunning Narrator and Civil Irony | 88 |
THE RECOVERY OF CEREMONY AT THE END OF | 101 |
Sidneys Silly Poetry and Grave Governor | 108 |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
appears argued argument aristocratic articulate authority Bacon believe better body Browne called century ceremonial character Christian Chronicle church civil claims classical common criticism culture debate Defense discourse early edition educated Edward England English Essays experience fact figure gives hand happiness Henry hold Hooker human humanists individual intellectual irony Italy John kind king language Latin lead learning linguistic literary literature London means medieval Middle mind mode moral More's narrative nature Oxford particular philosophical poet poetry political praise Prayer problem prose rational readers reason regard religion religious Renaissance rhetoric Richard romance says secular Sidney social society speech spiritual standard story Studies style subjects superior theory things Thomas thought tion tradition trans true truth Tudor turn understanding University Press virtue writers York