Cross-currents in 17th Century English Literature: The World, the Flesh, and the Spirit, Their Actions and Reactions |
Contents
RENAISSANCE AND REFORMATION | 1 |
EDMUND SPENSER | 29 |
COMEDY | 66 |
Copyright | |
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Aeschylus allegory Anglican audience Baxter beauty Bunyan Cambridge Cambridge Platonists Catholic century character Christ Christian Church condemnation conflict Counter-Reformation Court courtly critic Cromwell Dante death delight discipline divine doctrine Donne doth drama dramatists Dryden elegies Elizabethan England English ethical Faerie Queene faith father feeling God's grace hath heart Heaven HISTRIOMASTIX holy honour Hudibras human nature humanist ideal imagination imputed righteousness interest John Milton Jonson King learned literature loue love-poetry lover man's marriage mediaeval ment mind Montaigne moral never Othello pagan Paradise Lost passion pastime Petrarch pious plays poem poet poetry political popular Presbyterian Protestant Protestantism Prynne Puritan reason Reformation religion religious Renaissance Richard Crashaw romance Saints Satan says secular sense serious sermons Shakespeare songs sonnets soul speak Spenser spirit story taste temper thee theme theology things thou thought tion tradition tragedy Troilus Troilus and Criseyde verse virtue words