Animal Conventions in English Renaissance Non-religious Prose, 1550-1600 |
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Page 38
... represent men and women . His description of the type shows at a glance the close kinship be- tween the political ... represents the Britons . After William the Conqueror come two more dragons - William II of England and Robert II of ...
... represent men and women . His description of the type shows at a glance the close kinship be- tween the political ... represents the Britons . After William the Conqueror come two more dragons - William II of England and Robert II of ...
Page 71
... represent Martin and the Martinists as wolves or wolves in sheep's clothing229 and those misled by them as sheep.230 Nashe , in Strange Newes , represents Gabriel Harvey as having " put on wolues raiment already , seduced manie simple ...
... represent Martin and the Martinists as wolves or wolves in sheep's clothing229 and those misled by them as sheep.230 Nashe , in Strange Newes , represents Gabriel Harvey as having " put on wolues raiment already , seduced manie simple ...
Page 73
... represents a farmer as " a Cormorant of the com- mon wealth , and a wretch that liues of the spoile of the needy , " 254 one of those " very Cormorants of the Country " who " deuoure the poore people with their monstrous exaction ...
... represents a farmer as " a Cormorant of the com- mon wealth , and a wretch that liues of the spoile of the needy , " 254 one of those " very Cormorants of the Country " who " deuoure the poore people with their monstrous exaction ...
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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