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ix, 330 p. : 24 cm
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Previews available in: English
Subjects
History and criticism, Literary art, Kings' and rulers' writings, English, English poetry, Kings' and rulers' writings, Scottish, Henry VIII, King of England, 1491-1547 -- Literary art, Mary, Queen of Scots, 1542-1587 -- Literary art, Elizabeth I, Queen of England, 1533-1603 -- Literary art, James I, King of England, 1566-1625 -- Literary art, Kings' and rulers' writings, English -- History and criticism, English poetry -- Early modern, 1500-1700 -- History and criticism, Writing skillPeople
Elizabeth I Queen of England (1533-1603), Mary Queen of Scots (1542-1587), James I King of England (1566-1625), Henry VIII King of England (1491-1547)Times
Early modern, 1500-1700Edition | Availability |
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1
Reading monarch's writing: the poetry of Henry VIII, Mary Stuart, Elizabeth I, and James VI/I
2002, Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies
in English
0866982760 9780866982764
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Book Details
Table of Contents
Machine generated contents note: PART I
Reading Monarchs Writing: Introduction
Peter C. Herman & Ray G. Siemens 1
Henry VIII and the Poetry of Politics
Peter C. Herman & Ray G. Siemens 11
Writing to Control: The Verse of Mary, Queen of Scots
Lisa Hopkins 35
"mes subjectz, mon ame assubjectie":
The Problematic (of) Subjectivity in Mary Stuart's Sonnets
Peter C. Herman 51
"The Arte of a Ladies Penne":
Elizabeth I and the Poetics of Queenship
Jennifer Summit 79
States of Blindness: Doubt, Justice, and Constancy
in Elizabeth I's "Avec l'aveugler si estrange"
Constance Jordan 109
Queen Elizabeth I as Public and Private Poet:
Notes toward a New Edition
Leah S. Marcus 135
Kingcraft and Poetry: James VI's Cultural Policy
Sandra J. Bell 155
War and Peace in The Lepanto
Robert Appelbaum 179
PART II
SELECTED POEMS OF TUDOR/STUART MONARCHS
Henry VIII
"Pastime with good company" (The King's Ballad) 217
"Alas, what shall I do for love?" 218
"Oh, my heart" 219
"The time of youth is to be spent" 219
"Alac, Alac! What shall I do?" 220
"Hey nonny nonny, nonny nonny no!" 220
"Green grows the holly" 222
"Whoso that will all feats obtain" 223
"If love now reigned as it has been" 223
"Whereto should I express" 224
"Though that men do call it dotage" 225
"Departure is my chief pain" 226
"Without discord" 226
"Though some say that youth rules me" 227
"Whoso that will for grace sue" 227
"Lusty Youth should us ensue" 228
Mary Stuart
Quatrain Written in the Mass Book 231
Verses written in 1582
"Celui vraiment n'a point de courtoisie" 231
"Les dieux, les cieux" 232
Sonnets to Bothwell 232
Sonnet to Elizabeth 242
From Gleorge] B[uchanan], Ane Detectioun of the Duinges
(The Anglo-Scots Translation of Mary Stuart's
"Certain French Sonnets") 243
Elizabeth I
Written on a window frame at Woodstock, "O Fortune,
thy wresting,wavering state" 257
Written with a Diamond, "Much suspected by me" 258
On Monsieur's Departure, "I grieve and dare not show
my discontent" 258
Verse Exchange between Sir Walter Ralegh and Elizabeth
Ralegh to Elizabeth, "Fortune hath taken away my love" 259
Elizabeth to Ralegh, "Ah, silly Pug" 260
Elizabeth's French Verses 261
Variants of "The Doubt of Future Foes" 269
James VI/I
"The Twelve Sonnets of Invocations to The Gods" 281
"A Paraphrasticall Translation Out of the Poete Lucan" 288
"L'envoy" 290
The Author's Preface To The Reader
(from the 1603 Edition of The Lepanto) 291
The Lepanto 293.
Edition Notes
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Classifications
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