Women poets of the English Civil War
Herausgeber: Ross, Sarah C. E.; Scott-Baumann, Elizabeth
Women poets of the English Civil War
Herausgeber: Ross, Sarah C. E.; Scott-Baumann, Elizabeth
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Featuring modernised spelling and detailed explanatory notes, this anthology of Civil War-era women poets is perfect for students of English literature and early modern studies. -- .
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Featuring modernised spelling and detailed explanatory notes, this anthology of Civil War-era women poets is perfect for students of English literature and early modern studies. -- .
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Manchester University Press
- Seitenzahl: 388
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Dezember 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 27mm
- Gewicht: 778g
- ISBN-13: 9780719086243
- ISBN-10: 0719086248
- Artikelnr.: 48811299
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Produktsicherheitsverantwortliche/r
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Manchester University Press
- Seitenzahl: 388
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Dezember 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 27mm
- Gewicht: 778g
- ISBN-13: 9780719086243
- ISBN-10: 0719086248
- Artikelnr.: 48811299
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Produktsicherheitsverantwortliche/r
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Sarah C. E. Ross is Associate Professor in English at Victoria University of Wellington Elizabeth Scott-Baumann is Senior Lecturer in Early Modern Literature at King's College London
Timeline Introduction Further reading Anne Bradstreet From The Tenth Muse
Lately Sprung up in America (1650) The Prologue From The Four Monarchies A
Dialogue between Old England and New, Concerning their Present Troubles,
Anno 1642 An Elegy upon that Honourable and Renowned Knight, Sir Philip
Sidney, who was Untimely Slain at the Siege of Zutphen, Anno 1586 [1650] In
Honour of Du Bartas, 1641 In Honour of that High and Mighty Princess, Queen
Elizabeth, of Most Happy Memory David's Lamentation for Saul and Jonathan,
2 Samuel 1:19 From Several Poems (1678) An Elegy upon that Honourable and
Renowned Knight, Sir Philip Sidney, who was Untimely Slain at the Siege of
Zutphen, Anno 1586 [1678] The Flesh and the Spirit The Author to her Book A
Letter to her Husband, Absent upon Public Employment Another ['As loving
hind'] In Memory of my Dear Grandchild Elizabeth Bradstreet, who Deceased
August 1605, Being a Year and Half Old Hester Pulter The Invitation into
the Country, to my Dear Daughters, M.P., P.P, 1647, when his Sacred Majesty
was at Unhappy Hour The Complaint of Thames, 1647, when the Best of Kings
was Imprisoned by the Worst of Rebels at Holmby On Those Two Unparalleled
Friends, Sir George Lisle and Sir Charles Lucas Upon the Death of my Dear
and Lovely Daughter, J.P. On the Same ['Tell me no more'] Upon the
Imprisonment of his Sacred Majesty, that Unparalleled Prince King Charles
the First On the Horrid Murder of that Incomparable Prince, King Charles
the First On the Same ['Let none sigh more'] The Circle ['In sighs and
tears there is no end] 'Dear God turn not away thy face' The Circle ['Those
that the hidden chemic art profess'] On the King's Most Excellent Majesty
To my Dear J.P., M.P., P.P, they Being at London, I at Broadfield A
Solitary Complaint 'Must I thus ever interdicted be?' 'Why must I thus
forever be confined' To Sir William Davenant, upon the Unspeakable Loss of
the Most Conspicuous and Chief Ornament of his Frontispiece The Weeping
Wish Emblem 4 Emblem 20 Emblem 22 Katherine Philips From the 'Tutin'
Manuscript To my Dearest Antenor on his Parting A Retired Friendship, to
Ardelia, 23rd August 1651 Friendship's Mysteries, to my Dearest Lucasia
Content, to my Dearest Lucasia Friendship in Emblem, or the Seal, to my
Dearest Lucasia From the 'Tutin' Manuscript, reverse The World The Soul
Invitation to the Country On the 3rd September 1651 2 Corinthians 5:19, God
was in Christ reconciling the world to himself, 8th April 1653 From Poems
(1664) Upon the Double Murder of King Charles I, in Answer to a Libellous
Copy of Rhymes Made by Vavasor Powell On the Numerous Access of the English
to Wait upon the King in Flanders Arion on a Dolphin, to his Majesty in his
Passage into England On the Fair Weather Just at Coronation On the Death of
the Queen of Bohemia To the Right Honourable Alice, Countess of Carbery, on
her Enriching Wales with her Presence To Antenor, on a Paper of mine which
J. Jones Threatens to Publish to Prejudice him A Country Life Upon Mr
Abraham Cowley's Retirement. Ode. From Poems (1667) Epitaph on her Son H.P.
at St Sith's Church, where her Body also Lies Interred To my Antenor, March
16 1661/2 Orinda upon Little Hector Philips Margaret Cavendish From
Philosophical Fancies (1653) Of Sense and Reason Exercised in their
Different Shapes A Dialogue between the Body and the Mind An Elegy From
Poems and Fancies (1664) The Poetress's Hasty Resolution A World Made by
Atoms Of the Subtlety of Motion Of Vacuum Of Stars A World in an Earring
The Purchase of Poets, or A Dialogue Betwixt the Poets, and Fame and
Homer's Marriage A Dialogue betwixt Man and Nature A Dialogue between an
Oak and a Man Cutting him Down A Dialogue between a Bountiful Knight and a
Castle Ruined in War The Clasp The Hunting of the Hare A Description of an
Island The Ruin of this Island Wherein Poetry Chiefly Consists A
Description of a Shepherd's and Shepherdess's Life The Clasp: Of Fairies in
the Brain Upon the Funeral of my Dear Brother, Killed in these Unhappy Wars
Lucy Hutchinson From De Rerum Natura Book 1, lines 1-152 Book 2, lines
1048-1180 Book 4, lines 1019-1321 From British Library, Additional MS 17018
To Mr Waller upon his Panegyric to the Lord Protector From Elegies 1.
'Leave off, ye pitying friends, leave off' 2. To the Sun Shining into her
Chamber 2(a). 'Ah! Why doth death its latest stroke delay' 3. Another on
the Sunshine 7. To the Garden at Owthorpe 10. The Recovery 12. Musings in
my Evening Walks at Owthorpe 14. On the Spring, 1668 20. 'You sons of
England whose unquenched flame' From Order and Disorder Preface Canto 1,
lines 1-150 Canto 3, lines 91-188 Canto 9, lines 1-122 From Memoirs of the
Life of the Colonel Hutchinson 'All sorts of men through various labours
press' Textual introduction Textual notes Index of first lines
Lately Sprung up in America (1650) The Prologue From The Four Monarchies A
Dialogue between Old England and New, Concerning their Present Troubles,
Anno 1642 An Elegy upon that Honourable and Renowned Knight, Sir Philip
Sidney, who was Untimely Slain at the Siege of Zutphen, Anno 1586 [1650] In
Honour of Du Bartas, 1641 In Honour of that High and Mighty Princess, Queen
Elizabeth, of Most Happy Memory David's Lamentation for Saul and Jonathan,
2 Samuel 1:19 From Several Poems (1678) An Elegy upon that Honourable and
Renowned Knight, Sir Philip Sidney, who was Untimely Slain at the Siege of
Zutphen, Anno 1586 [1678] The Flesh and the Spirit The Author to her Book A
Letter to her Husband, Absent upon Public Employment Another ['As loving
hind'] In Memory of my Dear Grandchild Elizabeth Bradstreet, who Deceased
August 1605, Being a Year and Half Old Hester Pulter The Invitation into
the Country, to my Dear Daughters, M.P., P.P, 1647, when his Sacred Majesty
was at Unhappy Hour The Complaint of Thames, 1647, when the Best of Kings
was Imprisoned by the Worst of Rebels at Holmby On Those Two Unparalleled
Friends, Sir George Lisle and Sir Charles Lucas Upon the Death of my Dear
and Lovely Daughter, J.P. On the Same ['Tell me no more'] Upon the
Imprisonment of his Sacred Majesty, that Unparalleled Prince King Charles
the First On the Horrid Murder of that Incomparable Prince, King Charles
the First On the Same ['Let none sigh more'] The Circle ['In sighs and
tears there is no end] 'Dear God turn not away thy face' The Circle ['Those
that the hidden chemic art profess'] On the King's Most Excellent Majesty
To my Dear J.P., M.P., P.P, they Being at London, I at Broadfield A
Solitary Complaint 'Must I thus ever interdicted be?' 'Why must I thus
forever be confined' To Sir William Davenant, upon the Unspeakable Loss of
the Most Conspicuous and Chief Ornament of his Frontispiece The Weeping
Wish Emblem 4 Emblem 20 Emblem 22 Katherine Philips From the 'Tutin'
Manuscript To my Dearest Antenor on his Parting A Retired Friendship, to
Ardelia, 23rd August 1651 Friendship's Mysteries, to my Dearest Lucasia
Content, to my Dearest Lucasia Friendship in Emblem, or the Seal, to my
Dearest Lucasia From the 'Tutin' Manuscript, reverse The World The Soul
Invitation to the Country On the 3rd September 1651 2 Corinthians 5:19, God
was in Christ reconciling the world to himself, 8th April 1653 From Poems
(1664) Upon the Double Murder of King Charles I, in Answer to a Libellous
Copy of Rhymes Made by Vavasor Powell On the Numerous Access of the English
to Wait upon the King in Flanders Arion on a Dolphin, to his Majesty in his
Passage into England On the Fair Weather Just at Coronation On the Death of
the Queen of Bohemia To the Right Honourable Alice, Countess of Carbery, on
her Enriching Wales with her Presence To Antenor, on a Paper of mine which
J. Jones Threatens to Publish to Prejudice him A Country Life Upon Mr
Abraham Cowley's Retirement. Ode. From Poems (1667) Epitaph on her Son H.P.
at St Sith's Church, where her Body also Lies Interred To my Antenor, March
16 1661/2 Orinda upon Little Hector Philips Margaret Cavendish From
Philosophical Fancies (1653) Of Sense and Reason Exercised in their
Different Shapes A Dialogue between the Body and the Mind An Elegy From
Poems and Fancies (1664) The Poetress's Hasty Resolution A World Made by
Atoms Of the Subtlety of Motion Of Vacuum Of Stars A World in an Earring
The Purchase of Poets, or A Dialogue Betwixt the Poets, and Fame and
Homer's Marriage A Dialogue betwixt Man and Nature A Dialogue between an
Oak and a Man Cutting him Down A Dialogue between a Bountiful Knight and a
Castle Ruined in War The Clasp The Hunting of the Hare A Description of an
Island The Ruin of this Island Wherein Poetry Chiefly Consists A
Description of a Shepherd's and Shepherdess's Life The Clasp: Of Fairies in
the Brain Upon the Funeral of my Dear Brother, Killed in these Unhappy Wars
Lucy Hutchinson From De Rerum Natura Book 1, lines 1-152 Book 2, lines
1048-1180 Book 4, lines 1019-1321 From British Library, Additional MS 17018
To Mr Waller upon his Panegyric to the Lord Protector From Elegies 1.
'Leave off, ye pitying friends, leave off' 2. To the Sun Shining into her
Chamber 2(a). 'Ah! Why doth death its latest stroke delay' 3. Another on
the Sunshine 7. To the Garden at Owthorpe 10. The Recovery 12. Musings in
my Evening Walks at Owthorpe 14. On the Spring, 1668 20. 'You sons of
England whose unquenched flame' From Order and Disorder Preface Canto 1,
lines 1-150 Canto 3, lines 91-188 Canto 9, lines 1-122 From Memoirs of the
Life of the Colonel Hutchinson 'All sorts of men through various labours
press' Textual introduction Textual notes Index of first lines
Timeline Introduction Further reading Anne Bradstreet From The Tenth Muse
Lately Sprung up in America (1650) The Prologue From The Four Monarchies A
Dialogue between Old England and New, Concerning their Present Troubles,
Anno 1642 An Elegy upon that Honourable and Renowned Knight, Sir Philip
Sidney, who was Untimely Slain at the Siege of Zutphen, Anno 1586 [1650] In
Honour of Du Bartas, 1641 In Honour of that High and Mighty Princess, Queen
Elizabeth, of Most Happy Memory David's Lamentation for Saul and Jonathan,
2 Samuel 1:19 From Several Poems (1678) An Elegy upon that Honourable and
Renowned Knight, Sir Philip Sidney, who was Untimely Slain at the Siege of
Zutphen, Anno 1586 [1678] The Flesh and the Spirit The Author to her Book A
Letter to her Husband, Absent upon Public Employment Another ['As loving
hind'] In Memory of my Dear Grandchild Elizabeth Bradstreet, who Deceased
August 1605, Being a Year and Half Old Hester Pulter The Invitation into
the Country, to my Dear Daughters, M.P., P.P, 1647, when his Sacred Majesty
was at Unhappy Hour The Complaint of Thames, 1647, when the Best of Kings
was Imprisoned by the Worst of Rebels at Holmby On Those Two Unparalleled
Friends, Sir George Lisle and Sir Charles Lucas Upon the Death of my Dear
and Lovely Daughter, J.P. On the Same ['Tell me no more'] Upon the
Imprisonment of his Sacred Majesty, that Unparalleled Prince King Charles
the First On the Horrid Murder of that Incomparable Prince, King Charles
the First On the Same ['Let none sigh more'] The Circle ['In sighs and
tears there is no end] 'Dear God turn not away thy face' The Circle ['Those
that the hidden chemic art profess'] On the King's Most Excellent Majesty
To my Dear J.P., M.P., P.P, they Being at London, I at Broadfield A
Solitary Complaint 'Must I thus ever interdicted be?' 'Why must I thus
forever be confined' To Sir William Davenant, upon the Unspeakable Loss of
the Most Conspicuous and Chief Ornament of his Frontispiece The Weeping
Wish Emblem 4 Emblem 20 Emblem 22 Katherine Philips From the 'Tutin'
Manuscript To my Dearest Antenor on his Parting A Retired Friendship, to
Ardelia, 23rd August 1651 Friendship's Mysteries, to my Dearest Lucasia
Content, to my Dearest Lucasia Friendship in Emblem, or the Seal, to my
Dearest Lucasia From the 'Tutin' Manuscript, reverse The World The Soul
Invitation to the Country On the 3rd September 1651 2 Corinthians 5:19, God
was in Christ reconciling the world to himself, 8th April 1653 From Poems
(1664) Upon the Double Murder of King Charles I, in Answer to a Libellous
Copy of Rhymes Made by Vavasor Powell On the Numerous Access of the English
to Wait upon the King in Flanders Arion on a Dolphin, to his Majesty in his
Passage into England On the Fair Weather Just at Coronation On the Death of
the Queen of Bohemia To the Right Honourable Alice, Countess of Carbery, on
her Enriching Wales with her Presence To Antenor, on a Paper of mine which
J. Jones Threatens to Publish to Prejudice him A Country Life Upon Mr
Abraham Cowley's Retirement. Ode. From Poems (1667) Epitaph on her Son H.P.
at St Sith's Church, where her Body also Lies Interred To my Antenor, March
16 1661/2 Orinda upon Little Hector Philips Margaret Cavendish From
Philosophical Fancies (1653) Of Sense and Reason Exercised in their
Different Shapes A Dialogue between the Body and the Mind An Elegy From
Poems and Fancies (1664) The Poetress's Hasty Resolution A World Made by
Atoms Of the Subtlety of Motion Of Vacuum Of Stars A World in an Earring
The Purchase of Poets, or A Dialogue Betwixt the Poets, and Fame and
Homer's Marriage A Dialogue betwixt Man and Nature A Dialogue between an
Oak and a Man Cutting him Down A Dialogue between a Bountiful Knight and a
Castle Ruined in War The Clasp The Hunting of the Hare A Description of an
Island The Ruin of this Island Wherein Poetry Chiefly Consists A
Description of a Shepherd's and Shepherdess's Life The Clasp: Of Fairies in
the Brain Upon the Funeral of my Dear Brother, Killed in these Unhappy Wars
Lucy Hutchinson From De Rerum Natura Book 1, lines 1-152 Book 2, lines
1048-1180 Book 4, lines 1019-1321 From British Library, Additional MS 17018
To Mr Waller upon his Panegyric to the Lord Protector From Elegies 1.
'Leave off, ye pitying friends, leave off' 2. To the Sun Shining into her
Chamber 2(a). 'Ah! Why doth death its latest stroke delay' 3. Another on
the Sunshine 7. To the Garden at Owthorpe 10. The Recovery 12. Musings in
my Evening Walks at Owthorpe 14. On the Spring, 1668 20. 'You sons of
England whose unquenched flame' From Order and Disorder Preface Canto 1,
lines 1-150 Canto 3, lines 91-188 Canto 9, lines 1-122 From Memoirs of the
Life of the Colonel Hutchinson 'All sorts of men through various labours
press' Textual introduction Textual notes Index of first lines
Lately Sprung up in America (1650) The Prologue From The Four Monarchies A
Dialogue between Old England and New, Concerning their Present Troubles,
Anno 1642 An Elegy upon that Honourable and Renowned Knight, Sir Philip
Sidney, who was Untimely Slain at the Siege of Zutphen, Anno 1586 [1650] In
Honour of Du Bartas, 1641 In Honour of that High and Mighty Princess, Queen
Elizabeth, of Most Happy Memory David's Lamentation for Saul and Jonathan,
2 Samuel 1:19 From Several Poems (1678) An Elegy upon that Honourable and
Renowned Knight, Sir Philip Sidney, who was Untimely Slain at the Siege of
Zutphen, Anno 1586 [1678] The Flesh and the Spirit The Author to her Book A
Letter to her Husband, Absent upon Public Employment Another ['As loving
hind'] In Memory of my Dear Grandchild Elizabeth Bradstreet, who Deceased
August 1605, Being a Year and Half Old Hester Pulter The Invitation into
the Country, to my Dear Daughters, M.P., P.P, 1647, when his Sacred Majesty
was at Unhappy Hour The Complaint of Thames, 1647, when the Best of Kings
was Imprisoned by the Worst of Rebels at Holmby On Those Two Unparalleled
Friends, Sir George Lisle and Sir Charles Lucas Upon the Death of my Dear
and Lovely Daughter, J.P. On the Same ['Tell me no more'] Upon the
Imprisonment of his Sacred Majesty, that Unparalleled Prince King Charles
the First On the Horrid Murder of that Incomparable Prince, King Charles
the First On the Same ['Let none sigh more'] The Circle ['In sighs and
tears there is no end] 'Dear God turn not away thy face' The Circle ['Those
that the hidden chemic art profess'] On the King's Most Excellent Majesty
To my Dear J.P., M.P., P.P, they Being at London, I at Broadfield A
Solitary Complaint 'Must I thus ever interdicted be?' 'Why must I thus
forever be confined' To Sir William Davenant, upon the Unspeakable Loss of
the Most Conspicuous and Chief Ornament of his Frontispiece The Weeping
Wish Emblem 4 Emblem 20 Emblem 22 Katherine Philips From the 'Tutin'
Manuscript To my Dearest Antenor on his Parting A Retired Friendship, to
Ardelia, 23rd August 1651 Friendship's Mysteries, to my Dearest Lucasia
Content, to my Dearest Lucasia Friendship in Emblem, or the Seal, to my
Dearest Lucasia From the 'Tutin' Manuscript, reverse The World The Soul
Invitation to the Country On the 3rd September 1651 2 Corinthians 5:19, God
was in Christ reconciling the world to himself, 8th April 1653 From Poems
(1664) Upon the Double Murder of King Charles I, in Answer to a Libellous
Copy of Rhymes Made by Vavasor Powell On the Numerous Access of the English
to Wait upon the King in Flanders Arion on a Dolphin, to his Majesty in his
Passage into England On the Fair Weather Just at Coronation On the Death of
the Queen of Bohemia To the Right Honourable Alice, Countess of Carbery, on
her Enriching Wales with her Presence To Antenor, on a Paper of mine which
J. Jones Threatens to Publish to Prejudice him A Country Life Upon Mr
Abraham Cowley's Retirement. Ode. From Poems (1667) Epitaph on her Son H.P.
at St Sith's Church, where her Body also Lies Interred To my Antenor, March
16 1661/2 Orinda upon Little Hector Philips Margaret Cavendish From
Philosophical Fancies (1653) Of Sense and Reason Exercised in their
Different Shapes A Dialogue between the Body and the Mind An Elegy From
Poems and Fancies (1664) The Poetress's Hasty Resolution A World Made by
Atoms Of the Subtlety of Motion Of Vacuum Of Stars A World in an Earring
The Purchase of Poets, or A Dialogue Betwixt the Poets, and Fame and
Homer's Marriage A Dialogue betwixt Man and Nature A Dialogue between an
Oak and a Man Cutting him Down A Dialogue between a Bountiful Knight and a
Castle Ruined in War The Clasp The Hunting of the Hare A Description of an
Island The Ruin of this Island Wherein Poetry Chiefly Consists A
Description of a Shepherd's and Shepherdess's Life The Clasp: Of Fairies in
the Brain Upon the Funeral of my Dear Brother, Killed in these Unhappy Wars
Lucy Hutchinson From De Rerum Natura Book 1, lines 1-152 Book 2, lines
1048-1180 Book 4, lines 1019-1321 From British Library, Additional MS 17018
To Mr Waller upon his Panegyric to the Lord Protector From Elegies 1.
'Leave off, ye pitying friends, leave off' 2. To the Sun Shining into her
Chamber 2(a). 'Ah! Why doth death its latest stroke delay' 3. Another on
the Sunshine 7. To the Garden at Owthorpe 10. The Recovery 12. Musings in
my Evening Walks at Owthorpe 14. On the Spring, 1668 20. 'You sons of
England whose unquenched flame' From Order and Disorder Preface Canto 1,
lines 1-150 Canto 3, lines 91-188 Canto 9, lines 1-122 From Memoirs of the
Life of the Colonel Hutchinson 'All sorts of men through various labours
press' Textual introduction Textual notes Index of first lines