dissertationThis study tries to account for the differences between Donne's and the other satires of the 1590's. It analyzes the five satires from the point of view of rhetorical technique, and finds that the poems use predominantly the devices of teaching. They at least pretend to be didactic discourse. Elizabethan formal verse satire is usually epideictic; Donne's is deliberative in overall purpose, though the other rhetorical modes are used to achieve the end. The poems show an interest in virtue and vice, in ways that reflect the cardinal virtue tradition. They assert an optimistic v i.cw of the power of reason to lead men to virtue. They are informed by an ideal of the sapiens upon whom is conferred a civic responsibility. They also sh...
Cette étude s'attache à démontrer comment les écrits satiriques du poète élisabéthain John Donne (15...
This study proposes to treat John Donne as a heretic of approach and idiom. It will show that his re...
Here is the ideal introduction to satire for the student and, for the experienced scholar, an occasi...
The formal satire of the late English Renaissance is a complex phenomenon, modelled upon the classic...
This dissertation argues that satire, or more specifically “railing,” provided the writers of the En...
This study aims to show how the satiric writings of Elizabethan poet John Donne (1572-1631) display ...
This dissertation argues for a critical re-examination of the satiric literature circulating in prin...
This dissertation examines the question of how far the secular poems of John Donne may be didactic a...
This essay focuses on the metaphors of John Donne’s satires, and on the witty effect they produce. C...
grantor: University of TorontoThis study explores the interrelations of rhetoric, medicine...
This essay is a survey of Renaissance satire from the early sixteenth into the seventeenth centuries...
grantor: University of TorontoCommencing from a recognition of the ways in which the didac...
This article explores John Donne’s imagery of humoral complexions in verse letters to patrons and in...
This essay focuses on the interactions between sciences and satire in John Donne’s poetry. The emerg...
The purpose of this study is to show that some aspects of Browning\u27s satire clarify his use of tr...
Cette étude s'attache à démontrer comment les écrits satiriques du poète élisabéthain John Donne (15...
This study proposes to treat John Donne as a heretic of approach and idiom. It will show that his re...
Here is the ideal introduction to satire for the student and, for the experienced scholar, an occasi...
The formal satire of the late English Renaissance is a complex phenomenon, modelled upon the classic...
This dissertation argues that satire, or more specifically “railing,” provided the writers of the En...
This study aims to show how the satiric writings of Elizabethan poet John Donne (1572-1631) display ...
This dissertation argues for a critical re-examination of the satiric literature circulating in prin...
This dissertation examines the question of how far the secular poems of John Donne may be didactic a...
This essay focuses on the metaphors of John Donne’s satires, and on the witty effect they produce. C...
grantor: University of TorontoThis study explores the interrelations of rhetoric, medicine...
This essay is a survey of Renaissance satire from the early sixteenth into the seventeenth centuries...
grantor: University of TorontoCommencing from a recognition of the ways in which the didac...
This article explores John Donne’s imagery of humoral complexions in verse letters to patrons and in...
This essay focuses on the interactions between sciences and satire in John Donne’s poetry. The emerg...
The purpose of this study is to show that some aspects of Browning\u27s satire clarify his use of tr...
Cette étude s'attache à démontrer comment les écrits satiriques du poète élisabéthain John Donne (15...
This study proposes to treat John Donne as a heretic of approach and idiom. It will show that his re...
Here is the ideal introduction to satire for the student and, for the experienced scholar, an occasi...