Women and the English Renaissance: Literature and the Nature of Womankind, 1540 to 1620University of Illinois Press, 1984 - 364 ページ Impressively examines the relation sixteenth-century controversies about the nature of women have to literature and life. |
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... Agrippa's pleasantest moments is his defense of that univer- sally - rued vice of womankind , talkativeness . “ And is not a womā better spoke , more eloquent , more copious and plentyfull of wordes than a man ? " he unblushingly ...
... Agrippa's pleasantest moments is his defense of that univer- sally - rued vice of womankind , talkativeness . “ And is not a womā better spoke , more eloquent , more copious and plentyfull of wordes than a man ? " he unblushingly ...
45 ページ
... Agrippa with the utmost clar- ity . In Mulierum Pean , Pilate's wife is followed immediately by the woman . of Canaan . In Agrippa , these two exempla are separated by some ex- tremely dubious examples of feminine virtue ; Gosynhyll has ...
... Agrippa with the utmost clar- ity . In Mulierum Pean , Pilate's wife is followed immediately by the woman . of Canaan . In Agrippa , these two exempla are separated by some ex- tremely dubious examples of feminine virtue ; Gosynhyll has ...
72 ページ
... Agrippa spent 1510 in England on a dip- lomatic mission and was introduced to humanist circles by John Colet , whose guest he was . Agrippa was in Castiglione's native Italy from 1511 to 1518 , where as a theologian he attended the ...
... Agrippa spent 1510 in England on a dip- lomatic mission and was introduced to humanist circles by John Colet , whose guest he was . Agrippa was in Castiglione's native Italy from 1511 to 1518 , where as a theologian he attended the ...
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