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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... queen Zenobia , who establishes herself as an insufferable prig by declaring that she is seldom away from home so late in the eve- ning and expressing pious hopes that she will not be slandered or prop- ositioned during dinner . If this ...
... queen Zenobia , who establishes herself as an insufferable prig by declaring that she is seldom away from home so late in the eve- ning and expressing pious hopes that she will not be slandered or prop- ositioned during dinner . If this ...
71 ページ
... queen , the genre was to attract suitors into old age . NOTES 1. I deliberately resist the temptation to speculate on why the contro- versy lay dormant : to link its revival to the death of Queen Mary and accession of Queen Elizabeth ...
... queen , the genre was to attract suitors into old age . NOTES 1. I deliberately resist the temptation to speculate on why the contro- versy lay dormant : to link its revival to the death of Queen Mary and accession of Queen Elizabeth ...
194 ページ
... queen of Cambria boasts , " I rule the King of Cambria as I please " ( Sig . D2 ) . Gloucester in 1 Henry VI is told , " Thy wife is proud . She holdeth thee in awe / More than God or religious churchmen may " ( I.i.39-40 ) ; later ...
... queen of Cambria boasts , " I rule the King of Cambria as I please " ( Sig . D2 ) . Gloucester in 1 Henry VI is told , " Thy wife is proud . She holdeth thee in awe / More than God or religious churchmen may " ( I.i.39-40 ) ; later ...
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