Image Government: Monarchical Metamorphoses in English Literature and Art, 1649-1702"Image Government traces some of the cranks and windings, ebbings and flowings that lead from Charles I's downfall to Queen Anne's coronation as they are registered in printed literature and visual art. The poetry of Marvel and Dryden, multifarious political writings by greater and lesser figures, and the work of significant divines like the Whiggish Burnet, and Hickes, doyen of the nonjurers, are all used to show how the expression of ideas changed in the second half of the seventeenth century. While showing his awareness of the contributions of modern scholarship, the author displays a magisterial grasp of primary sources, often little exploited. The book explores aspects of sovereignty and the underlying principles of political cohesion for the benefit of students and scholars of later seventeenth-century literature, history and art."--BOOK JACKET. |
From inside the book
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Page 133
... Romans cannot compete ' - the ' new ' Romans , that is , to correspond to his ' new Alexander ' : the Roman Catholic kings and princes of Europe , led by Louis XIV and including the exiled James II . as he But can this be quite right ...
... Romans cannot compete ' - the ' new ' Romans , that is , to correspond to his ' new Alexander ' : the Roman Catholic kings and princes of Europe , led by Louis XIV and including the exiled James II . as he But can this be quite right ...
Page 152
... Roman Saint and exemplar of all ' popetry ' to come , making intercession for all his imperial ' Neveux ' on the ... Roman ambitions . But Marcus Aurelius , though a Roman and grouped with Romans , nevertheless wrote in Greek ; a ...
... Roman Saint and exemplar of all ' popetry ' to come , making intercession for all his imperial ' Neveux ' on the ... Roman ambitions . But Marcus Aurelius , though a Roman and grouped with Romans , nevertheless wrote in Greek ; a ...
Page 190
... Roman Empire by the Goths and Vandals : led to ' the execrable reign of the Roman emperors ' and ' an empire of men and not of laws ' ; 21 not to mention his own most gory death and ' the total extinction of his family ' , innocent or ...
... Roman Empire by the Goths and Vandals : led to ' the execrable reign of the Roman emperors ' and ' an empire of men and not of laws ' ; 21 not to mention his own most gory death and ' the total extinction of his family ' , innocent or ...
Other editions - View all
Image Government: Monarchical Metamorphoses in English Literature and Art ... T. R. Langley No preview available - 2001 |
Common terms and phrases
Absalom and Achitophel Aeneas Aeneid Alexander Anniversary Anti-Panegyrike Augustus Augustus Caesar Burnet Caesar Cambridge Césars Charles Charles's Christ commonwealth conscious thinking Constantine Coopers Hill couplet course Cromwell Cromwell's Crown Divine Dryden Dutch edited Edmund Waller emperor England English Essays Francis Atterbury George Wither gods Golden Government and Obedience Hall Hampton Court Hampton Court Palace hand Harrington hath Henry History Hobbes Holland ibid Image government James James's John Julian the Apostate Julius Julius Caesar King King's Staircase late Storme Leviathan London Lord Protector Love Majesties Happy Return Marcus Aurelius Marvell Marvell's Milton Monarchy Nature Observations once Oxford Panegyrick Parliament perhaps person Poetry political Pope preached Prince Reign Restoration Revolution Richard Roman Royal Salt upon Salt Scala Regia Sermon Shaftesbury Silenus Spanheim Stuart things Thomas Throne translated Verrio verses Virgil Waller's Poems Watson William Wind Windsor Forest Wither words