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“Some Other Kind of Lore”: Satire and Self-Governance in Spenserian Poetry

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Repository DOI


Type

Article

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Authors

Brogan, Boyd 

Abstract

This article investigates William Browne’s use of a poem by the medieval poet Thomas Hoccleve as a tribute to his imprisoned fellow-poet George Wither. It argues that Hoccleve’s self-referential poem-sequence The Series plays a wider role in Browne’s poem, and Wither’s responses to it, than has been realised. Recent scholarship has emphasised the unity of these “Spenserian” poets, and explored their innovative uses of the pastoral genre to express public, political concerns. But Browne’s Hoccleve quotation reveals the important role that satire, and its traditional interests in self-governance, played in their work, strengthening recent arguments for these poems’ influence on Burton’s Anatomy of Melancholy. The Spenserians used dialogic forms not simply to demonstrate consensus but to explore their differences, and rather than the poetic and political alliance that has been assumed, Browne’s ambiguous tribute to Wither may have created a lasting rift. But it also had a more productive legacy in shaping Wither’s turn to the psalms. Browne’s Hocclevian eclogue helps to uncover the political roots of this project, and of the wider prophetic identity that Wither came to assume

Description

Keywords

47 Language, Communication and Culture, 4705 Literary Studies, 16 Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions

Journal Title

Studies in Philology

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0039-3738
1543-0383

Volume Title

114

Publisher

Project Muse