In the English Renaissance, the myth of Medusa is endowed with a variety of moral, theological and literary readings which are intricately superimposed. With her snaky locks and petrifying look, Medusa takes on the shape of a monstrous beauty and spreads terror and evil around her. At the sight of this stunning yet repulsive woman, humans are petrified into statues. Conversely, in Petrarch’s poems, she appears as a cold, insensitive mistress who never responds to the call of the poet, who is thus translated into a lifeless block. Faced with this overwhelming literary tradition, the Elizabethan poet is either mesmerized by Medusa’s power and trapped in a stereotyped style, or become a new Perseus who, thanks to the reflection of his polished...