Animal Conventions in English Renaissance Non-religious Prose, 1550-1600 |
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Page 41
... Elizabethan English- men were confronted almost at every turn with this animal lore , appearing in one form or another , so that writers like Lyly , Greene , Lodge , Nashe , Deloney , and Sidney had ample precedent for their employment ...
... Elizabethan English- men were confronted almost at every turn with this animal lore , appearing in one form or another , so that writers like Lyly , Greene , Lodge , Nashe , Deloney , and Sidney had ample precedent for their employment ...
Page 46
... Elizabethan prose that they may be considered favorite words ; 1 and the reason is not far to seek . Beast or brute , or any of the forms derived from these nouns , as used in the educational treatises and in all the other prose ...
... Elizabethan prose that they may be considered favorite words ; 1 and the reason is not far to seek . Beast or brute , or any of the forms derived from these nouns , as used in the educational treatises and in all the other prose ...
Page 80
William Meredith Carroll. ticularly significant because their occurrence in the Elizabethan pastoral romances shows the persistence of a tradition which links the Elizabethan pastoral romance with the medieval romance . One of these ...
William Meredith Carroll. ticularly significant because their occurrence in the Elizabethan pastoral romances shows the persistence of a tradition which links the Elizabethan pastoral romance with the medieval romance . One of these ...
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Common terms and phrases
according Aesopic ancient animal symbolism appeared Aristotle Smith Arte of Rhetorique bear birds called compared contains conventional ideas creatures Deloney Mann Elizabethan emblem employed England Arber English Ephemerides of Phialo Euphues Arber example expression fables fishes Foure-Footed Beastes Gosson Greek Greene Grosart Harvey Grosart haue Historie of Foure-Footed Huntington Library facsimile ibid ideas about animals John Lyly Kerrow kind king lion literature Lodge Hunterian Club London medieval moral Nashe Mc Nashe McKerrow Natural History Rackham Painter Pallace of Pettie period Petite Pallace Pettie His Pleasure Phialo Huntington Library philosophy Pleasure Hartman Pliny poem points political popular Press prose reason recto represents Rhetorique Mair Riche romances satire says School of Abuse Sidney Feuillerat sixteenth century Smith and Ross story tells Thomas Topsell tradition translation University verso vertue VIII Wilson's Arte wolf writings