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      Grief and English Renaissance Elegy

      monograph
      Cambridge University Press

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          Abstract

          For most of the sixteenth century, English poets were clearly anxious about the grief expressed in their funeral poems and often rebuked themselves for indulging in it, but towards the end of the century this defensiveness about mourning became less pressing and persistent. The shift is part of a wider cultural change which has escaped recognition: the emergence of a more compassionate attitude towards the process of mourning. In charting the development of elegy this book analyses poems by Surrey, Spenser, Jonson, Henry King and Milton, and also surveys a wide range of forgotten verse, both English and neo-Latin, as well as letter-writing handbooks and moral-theological tracts. The book culminates in a detailed study of the most famous elegy in the language, Milton's Lycidas.

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          9780521268714
          9780521034739
          9780511519703
          August 28 2009
          February 28 1985
          10.1017/CBO9780511519703
          35ac0b8f-0072-4475-8e4b-85361b162b07
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