John Donne and English Puritanism, 1650–1700

IF 0.3 2区 历史学 0 MEDIEVAL & RENAISSANCE STUDIES SEVENTEENTH CENTURY Pub Date : 2023-10-23 DOI:10.1080/0268117x.2023.2266480
Katherine Calloway
{"title":"John Donne and English Puritanism, 1650–1700","authors":"Katherine Calloway","doi":"10.1080/0268117x.2023.2266480","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"ABSTRACTIn recent decades, it has become clear that John Donne’s seventeenth-century readership is larger and more varied than was once believed. One audience that has not been given much scholarly attention, however, is English puritans on both sides of the Atlantic. This article brings to light several possible avenues for the transmission of Donne’s works to these readers and then identifies explicit references and poetic allusions to Donne by writers of these theological and ecclesiastical persuasions.KEYWORDS: John Donnepuritanismnonconformity Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1 Brooke Conti, rev. of Manuscript Matters, E100.2 Lein, ‘John Donne’, 114–16, lists twenty-four first editions of complete works authored by Donne printed in the seventeenth century; Sullivan, ‘Modern Scholarly Editions’, 65–80, works through the early prose publications/editions among these; he also collects hundreds of appearances of Donne’s verse in seventeenth-century multi-authored works in The Influence of John Donne.3 Critical studies of Donne’s early reception include A.J. Smith, ‘Donne’s Reputation’, and John Donne: The Critical Heritage; Shawcross, ‘Some Early References to John Donne’, ‘Some Further Early Allusions to Donne’, and ‘More Early Allusions to Donne and Herbert’; Sullivan, Influence of John Donne and ‘John Donne’s Seventeenth-Century Readers’; Daniel Starza Smith, John Donne and the Conway Papers; Lara M. Crowley, Manuscript Matters; and Joshua Eckhardt, Religion around John Donne.4 Sullivan, ‘Donne’s Seventeenth-Century Readers’, 26–27.5 ‘Puritan’, ‘Reformed’, ‘nonconformist’, and ‘dissenter’ have different meanings, the latter two applying in the Restoration when conformity to the established church was again enforced in England to varying degrees. Nonetheless, there is considerable overlap on the ground among members of these groups between 1650 and 1700, and in this essay I aim to cast a net over this theological and ecclesiastical plot – even including members of radical sects – defined against conforming or Catholic readers. For a discussion of the complexity of these categories, see Adlington, ‘Restoration, Religion, and Law’, 424–25; a helpful survey of the literary output of dissenters between 1558 and 1689 can be found in Sell, ‘Varieties of English Separatist and Dissenting Writings’, 25–46.6 Ibid., 29.7 Sullivan, Influence of John Donne, 7.8 Barbara Lewalski, Donne’s Anniversaries and the Poetry of Praise, 307–70.9 Raspa, ‘Introduction’, xli-xliv; Sullivan, ‘Introduction’, xlii-lvii, xxiv.10 Raspa, ‘Introduction’, lxxii-iii.11 Sullivan (ed.), Biathanatos, 73, citing Paul Sellin. Notably, Grindal’s parents were English puritan separatists who emigrated in 1608: see Schoneveld, ‘t Word grooter plas, 19.12 Dixon, ‘Sermons in Print’, 469. Dixon adds that ‘Isaac Watts’s copy [of Ecclesiastes], in which he recorded the recommendations of his tutor Thomas Rowe, is in Dr Williams’s Library, London’. Rowe (1656/7–1705) was an Independent minister.13 Rothwell, A catalogue of approved divinity-books, 77, lists ‘A sermon at whitehall 24 February, A sermon 15 September at Pauls Cross, [and] Deaths Duell’.14 Eckhardt, Religion around John Donne, 121.15 Ibid., 135–36.16 Some puritans may even have read him in manuscript: for instance, Donne’s Essayes in Divinity was dedicated to Sir Henry Vane the elder, a political moderate whose son was a noted parliamentarian and friend to numerous later nonconformists: see Raspa, ‘Introduction’ to Devotions, li and Mayers, ‘Vane, Sir Henry, the younger (1613–1662)’. On the breadth of manuscript circulation in early modern England, see for instance Ezell, The Patriarch’s Wife.17 Sullivan, Influence of John Donne, 7–9.18 James Jacob, Henry Stubbe, 1–2, roundly attacks the idea that Stubbe was ‘a turncoat who rejected the Revolution and became a conservative defender of the established church’, finding in the Restoration Stubbe instead a devotee of ‘a radical civil religion’ which ‘entailed a policy of toleration for Protestant Dissenters’. In the 2004 entry on Stubbe in the ODNB, on the other hand, Mordechai Feingold points out that Stubbe took the oath of allegiance by 1662. In any case, he was professedly an Independent Republican in the 1650s, when he was translating Donne’s poems.19 Stubbe, Deliciae poetarum, 36–41: the poems are ‘A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning’, ‘Hero and Leander’, and the epigram ‘A Licentious Person’. The quotation comes from Lord Bacon’s Relation, 64 and probably refers to Constantijn Huygens, whose translations of nineteen of Donne’s poems were first published in 1658. See Sullivan, Influence of John Donne, 129–30 and L. Strengholt, ‘Constantijn Huygens’ Translation’, 173.20 Catalogus variorum & insignium, 19, 22, 38, and 40.21 e.g. Manton, XVIII Sermons, 460; A Practical Exposition, 434; A second volume of sermons, 73; A fourth volume, 354 and 710; and A practical commentary, 116. These are all separate references, not reprintings of the same sermon. Calvin uses the phrase arcem … mentis in Institutes 2.1.9, declaring that impiety and pride (not Satan) occupy the citadel.22 Gribben, Puritan Millennium, 212.23 Manton, A second volume of sermons, 73. Compare as well to Baxter’s 1681 poem ‘The Lamentation’ in Poetical Fragments, 63: ‘It is not causless, if [God] pierce the Heart/ … /Where should Jehovah’s battering Cannons play,/But at the Fortress where his Enemy lay?’24 For example, William Prynne (another difficult person to classify) lists Donne’s ‘printed sermons’ among a litany of authorities who attack the Jesuits in his Seasonable, legal, and historicall vindication … of all English freemen (London, 1655), unnumbered page.25 Lee, Orbis Miraculum, 6.26 Wells, 567.27 Burgess, Christians earnest expectation, 33–34.28 Ness, A distinct discourse, 13–14.29 Shower, A new-years gift, 15–16.30 Ley, The Saints Rest, 27.31 Ley, Exceptions many and just, 30.32 Dunn et al. (eds.), The Papers of William Penn, 81.33 Penn, No Cross, No Crown,, preface.34 Ibid., 100.35 Ibid., preface.36 Fair Warnings was published again in 1668, this time with a named author: the royalist and biographer David Lloyd (1635–92).37 e.g. Mayhew, Tria Sunt Omnia, 166 and Sichah, 190–91; Whitcombe, An essay to promote virtue, 46; Turner, A compleat history, 88; and Piggot, A Funeral Sermon, 406. Robert Overton also uses this quotation: see Norbrook, ‘Blushing Tribute’, 234.38 Nehemiah Rogers cites Donne as ‘a learned Doctor’ in The Figg-less Figg-tree, 13 and 248 and The rich fool set forth, 109.39 Greaves, ‘Rogers, John (b. 1627)’, ODNB.40 John Rogers, Ohel or Beth-Shemesh, 378.41 Ibid., 390. Smith, Perfection Proclaimed, 36 and Gribben, Puritan Millennium, 212, note Rogers’s allusions to Donne.42 Norbrook, ‘Blushing Tribute’, 220.43 Shawcross twice alleges that Pain is ‘Anglican’ but gives no evidence for this in either place: ‘Pain, Philip (1647–1667), poet’, ANB, mentioning allegations to the contrary, and ‘Some Colonial American Writers’, 36. Given that Congregationalism was established in Massachusetts, I view the burden of proof as resting on the scholar maintaining that a member of this colony was ‘Anglican’.44 e.g. Warren, ‘Edward Taylor’s Poetry’ and Wallace Cable Brown, ‘Edward Taylor: An American “Metaphysical”’; for a more recent assessment of Donne and Taylor’s shared poetics, see Kimberly Johnson, Made Flesh, e.g. 88–89: “Like Taylor’s menstrual poetics, Donne’s metaphors relocate significance to the fleshly … . As Taylor does, Donne leaves in his sermons a healthy metacommentary on the concerns that animate his poetry’.45 Thomas H. Johnson, ‘Edward Taylor: A Puritan “Sacred Poet”’, 322.46 Shawcross, ‘Some Colonial American Writers’, 36.47 Ibid., 33.48 Ibid., 36.49 Harold S. Jantz, ‘The First Century of New England Verse’, 423.50 Shawcross, ‘Some Colonial American Writers’, 39.51 Dailey, Barbara. ‘Oakes, Urian (1631–25 July 1681)’, ANB.52 Shawcross, ‘Some Colonial American Writers’, 41.53 Harrison T. Maserole, Seventeenth-Century American Poetry (New York, 1968), 213–14.54 Works by Donne begin to crop up in auction catalogues in the early eighteenth century: the Early American Imprints database lists Biathanatos in a catalogue from 1719 and ‘treatises’ by Donne in one from 1720.55 Scott-Bauman, Forms of Engagement 126, and Norbrook, ‘Blushing Tribute’, 234, assert Donne’s popularity among puritans, but neither gives examples of puritan readers of Donne outside of Overton and Hutchinson. Scott-Bauman cites Lewalski’s Donne’s Anniversaries and the Poetry of Praise (1973) in defence of this claim, naming Daniel Price and Andrew Marvell in particular, but Price, though a staunch Calvinist, was Dean of Hereford and died in 1631. Lewalski’s study of Donne’s legacy stops in the 1650s with Marvell, whose ecclesiology is slippery.56 Barbara Taft, ‘Overton, Robert (1608/9–1678/9), parliamentarian army officer’, ODNB.57 Norbrook, ‘Blushing Tribute’, 236.58 Jessie Hock, The Erotics of Materialism, 118–44, discusses Hutchinson’s use of Lucretian themes her biblical epic Order and Disorder as well as her Elegies for John Hutchinson.59 Scott-Bauman, Forms of Engagement, 126.60 Ibid., 135–36.61 Hock, Erotics of Materialism, 135.62 Norbrook, ‘Lucy Hutchinson’s “Elegies”’ 505–6, 511. On page 480 Norbrook asserts that ‘The Recovery’ also recalls ‘Forbidding Mourning’.63 Hutchinson, Order and Disorder, 172–73.64 Helen Wilcox, ‘In the Temple Precincts’, 264.","PeriodicalId":54080,"journal":{"name":"SEVENTEENTH CENTURY","volume":"PAMI-1 2","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.3000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-23","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"SEVENTEENTH CENTURY","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/0268117x.2023.2266480","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"历史学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"MEDIEVAL & RENAISSANCE STUDIES","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

ABSTRACTIn recent decades, it has become clear that John Donne’s seventeenth-century readership is larger and more varied than was once believed. One audience that has not been given much scholarly attention, however, is English puritans on both sides of the Atlantic. This article brings to light several possible avenues for the transmission of Donne’s works to these readers and then identifies explicit references and poetic allusions to Donne by writers of these theological and ecclesiastical persuasions.KEYWORDS: John Donnepuritanismnonconformity Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1 Brooke Conti, rev. of Manuscript Matters, E100.2 Lein, ‘John Donne’, 114–16, lists twenty-four first editions of complete works authored by Donne printed in the seventeenth century; Sullivan, ‘Modern Scholarly Editions’, 65–80, works through the early prose publications/editions among these; he also collects hundreds of appearances of Donne’s verse in seventeenth-century multi-authored works in The Influence of John Donne.3 Critical studies of Donne’s early reception include A.J. Smith, ‘Donne’s Reputation’, and John Donne: The Critical Heritage; Shawcross, ‘Some Early References to John Donne’, ‘Some Further Early Allusions to Donne’, and ‘More Early Allusions to Donne and Herbert’; Sullivan, Influence of John Donne and ‘John Donne’s Seventeenth-Century Readers’; Daniel Starza Smith, John Donne and the Conway Papers; Lara M. Crowley, Manuscript Matters; and Joshua Eckhardt, Religion around John Donne.4 Sullivan, ‘Donne’s Seventeenth-Century Readers’, 26–27.5 ‘Puritan’, ‘Reformed’, ‘nonconformist’, and ‘dissenter’ have different meanings, the latter two applying in the Restoration when conformity to the established church was again enforced in England to varying degrees. Nonetheless, there is considerable overlap on the ground among members of these groups between 1650 and 1700, and in this essay I aim to cast a net over this theological and ecclesiastical plot – even including members of radical sects – defined against conforming or Catholic readers. For a discussion of the complexity of these categories, see Adlington, ‘Restoration, Religion, and Law’, 424–25; a helpful survey of the literary output of dissenters between 1558 and 1689 can be found in Sell, ‘Varieties of English Separatist and Dissenting Writings’, 25–46.6 Ibid., 29.7 Sullivan, Influence of John Donne, 7.8 Barbara Lewalski, Donne’s Anniversaries and the Poetry of Praise, 307–70.9 Raspa, ‘Introduction’, xli-xliv; Sullivan, ‘Introduction’, xlii-lvii, xxiv.10 Raspa, ‘Introduction’, lxxii-iii.11 Sullivan (ed.), Biathanatos, 73, citing Paul Sellin. Notably, Grindal’s parents were English puritan separatists who emigrated in 1608: see Schoneveld, ‘t Word grooter plas, 19.12 Dixon, ‘Sermons in Print’, 469. Dixon adds that ‘Isaac Watts’s copy [of Ecclesiastes], in which he recorded the recommendations of his tutor Thomas Rowe, is in Dr Williams’s Library, London’. Rowe (1656/7–1705) was an Independent minister.13 Rothwell, A catalogue of approved divinity-books, 77, lists ‘A sermon at whitehall 24 February, A sermon 15 September at Pauls Cross, [and] Deaths Duell’.14 Eckhardt, Religion around John Donne, 121.15 Ibid., 135–36.16 Some puritans may even have read him in manuscript: for instance, Donne’s Essayes in Divinity was dedicated to Sir Henry Vane the elder, a political moderate whose son was a noted parliamentarian and friend to numerous later nonconformists: see Raspa, ‘Introduction’ to Devotions, li and Mayers, ‘Vane, Sir Henry, the younger (1613–1662)’. On the breadth of manuscript circulation in early modern England, see for instance Ezell, The Patriarch’s Wife.17 Sullivan, Influence of John Donne, 7–9.18 James Jacob, Henry Stubbe, 1–2, roundly attacks the idea that Stubbe was ‘a turncoat who rejected the Revolution and became a conservative defender of the established church’, finding in the Restoration Stubbe instead a devotee of ‘a radical civil religion’ which ‘entailed a policy of toleration for Protestant Dissenters’. In the 2004 entry on Stubbe in the ODNB, on the other hand, Mordechai Feingold points out that Stubbe took the oath of allegiance by 1662. In any case, he was professedly an Independent Republican in the 1650s, when he was translating Donne’s poems.19 Stubbe, Deliciae poetarum, 36–41: the poems are ‘A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning’, ‘Hero and Leander’, and the epigram ‘A Licentious Person’. The quotation comes from Lord Bacon’s Relation, 64 and probably refers to Constantijn Huygens, whose translations of nineteen of Donne’s poems were first published in 1658. See Sullivan, Influence of John Donne, 129–30 and L. Strengholt, ‘Constantijn Huygens’ Translation’, 173.20 Catalogus variorum & insignium, 19, 22, 38, and 40.21 e.g. Manton, XVIII Sermons, 460; A Practical Exposition, 434; A second volume of sermons, 73; A fourth volume, 354 and 710; and A practical commentary, 116. These are all separate references, not reprintings of the same sermon. Calvin uses the phrase arcem … mentis in Institutes 2.1.9, declaring that impiety and pride (not Satan) occupy the citadel.22 Gribben, Puritan Millennium, 212.23 Manton, A second volume of sermons, 73. Compare as well to Baxter’s 1681 poem ‘The Lamentation’ in Poetical Fragments, 63: ‘It is not causless, if [God] pierce the Heart/ … /Where should Jehovah’s battering Cannons play,/But at the Fortress where his Enemy lay?’24 For example, William Prynne (another difficult person to classify) lists Donne’s ‘printed sermons’ among a litany of authorities who attack the Jesuits in his Seasonable, legal, and historicall vindication … of all English freemen (London, 1655), unnumbered page.25 Lee, Orbis Miraculum, 6.26 Wells, 567.27 Burgess, Christians earnest expectation, 33–34.28 Ness, A distinct discourse, 13–14.29 Shower, A new-years gift, 15–16.30 Ley, The Saints Rest, 27.31 Ley, Exceptions many and just, 30.32 Dunn et al. (eds.), The Papers of William Penn, 81.33 Penn, No Cross, No Crown,, preface.34 Ibid., 100.35 Ibid., preface.36 Fair Warnings was published again in 1668, this time with a named author: the royalist and biographer David Lloyd (1635–92).37 e.g. Mayhew, Tria Sunt Omnia, 166 and Sichah, 190–91; Whitcombe, An essay to promote virtue, 46; Turner, A compleat history, 88; and Piggot, A Funeral Sermon, 406. Robert Overton also uses this quotation: see Norbrook, ‘Blushing Tribute’, 234.38 Nehemiah Rogers cites Donne as ‘a learned Doctor’ in The Figg-less Figg-tree, 13 and 248 and The rich fool set forth, 109.39 Greaves, ‘Rogers, John (b. 1627)’, ODNB.40 John Rogers, Ohel or Beth-Shemesh, 378.41 Ibid., 390. Smith, Perfection Proclaimed, 36 and Gribben, Puritan Millennium, 212, note Rogers’s allusions to Donne.42 Norbrook, ‘Blushing Tribute’, 220.43 Shawcross twice alleges that Pain is ‘Anglican’ but gives no evidence for this in either place: ‘Pain, Philip (1647–1667), poet’, ANB, mentioning allegations to the contrary, and ‘Some Colonial American Writers’, 36. Given that Congregationalism was established in Massachusetts, I view the burden of proof as resting on the scholar maintaining that a member of this colony was ‘Anglican’.44 e.g. Warren, ‘Edward Taylor’s Poetry’ and Wallace Cable Brown, ‘Edward Taylor: An American “Metaphysical”’; for a more recent assessment of Donne and Taylor’s shared poetics, see Kimberly Johnson, Made Flesh, e.g. 88–89: “Like Taylor’s menstrual poetics, Donne’s metaphors relocate significance to the fleshly … . As Taylor does, Donne leaves in his sermons a healthy metacommentary on the concerns that animate his poetry’.45 Thomas H. Johnson, ‘Edward Taylor: A Puritan “Sacred Poet”’, 322.46 Shawcross, ‘Some Colonial American Writers’, 36.47 Ibid., 33.48 Ibid., 36.49 Harold S. Jantz, ‘The First Century of New England Verse’, 423.50 Shawcross, ‘Some Colonial American Writers’, 39.51 Dailey, Barbara. ‘Oakes, Urian (1631–25 July 1681)’, ANB.52 Shawcross, ‘Some Colonial American Writers’, 41.53 Harrison T. Maserole, Seventeenth-Century American Poetry (New York, 1968), 213–14.54 Works by Donne begin to crop up in auction catalogues in the early eighteenth century: the Early American Imprints database lists Biathanatos in a catalogue from 1719 and ‘treatises’ by Donne in one from 1720.55 Scott-Bauman, Forms of Engagement 126, and Norbrook, ‘Blushing Tribute’, 234, assert Donne’s popularity among puritans, but neither gives examples of puritan readers of Donne outside of Overton and Hutchinson. Scott-Bauman cites Lewalski’s Donne’s Anniversaries and the Poetry of Praise (1973) in defence of this claim, naming Daniel Price and Andrew Marvell in particular, but Price, though a staunch Calvinist, was Dean of Hereford and died in 1631. Lewalski’s study of Donne’s legacy stops in the 1650s with Marvell, whose ecclesiology is slippery.56 Barbara Taft, ‘Overton, Robert (1608/9–1678/9), parliamentarian army officer’, ODNB.57 Norbrook, ‘Blushing Tribute’, 236.58 Jessie Hock, The Erotics of Materialism, 118–44, discusses Hutchinson’s use of Lucretian themes her biblical epic Order and Disorder as well as her Elegies for John Hutchinson.59 Scott-Bauman, Forms of Engagement, 126.60 Ibid., 135–36.61 Hock, Erotics of Materialism, 135.62 Norbrook, ‘Lucy Hutchinson’s “Elegies”’ 505–6, 511. On page 480 Norbrook asserts that ‘The Recovery’ also recalls ‘Forbidding Mourning’.63 Hutchinson, Order and Disorder, 172–73.64 Helen Wilcox, ‘In the Temple Precincts’, 264.
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约翰·多恩与英国清教,1650-1700
这些都是不同的参考文献,而不是同一篇讲道的重印。加尔文在《要义》2.1.9中使用了这个短语,宣称不虔诚和骄傲(不是撒旦)占据了城堡格里本,《清教徒的千年》,212.23曼顿,《布道集第二卷》,73。与巴克斯特1681年的诗《哀歌》相比,《诗片》第63页:“如果[上帝]刺穿人心,它不是没有因果关系的……/耶和华的大炮应该在哪里射击,/不是在他敌人所在的堡垒?”24例如,威廉·普林(另一个难以分类的人)在他的《对所有英国自由民的合理的、法律的和历史的辩护》(1655年,伦敦)中,将多恩的“印刷布道”列在一连串攻击耶稣会士的权威中(未编号的第25页)李,奥比斯奇迹,6.26威尔斯,567.27伯吉斯,基督徒热切的期望,33-34.28奈斯,一个独特的话语,13-14.29淋浴,新年礼物,15-16.30莱伊,圣徒休息,27.31莱伊,例外多而公正,30.32邓恩等人(编辑),威廉佩恩的论文,81.33佩恩,没有十字架,没有皇冠,序言。34同上,100.35同上,序言36《公平警告》于1668年再次出版,这一次署名作者是保皇党和传记作家大卫·劳埃德(David Lloyd, 1635-92)。37 .例如,特里亚-苏姆尼亚的梅休,166年和西哈,1990 - 91年;惠特库姆:《提倡美德的随笔》,第46页;特纳,《完整的历史》,88分;《葬礼布道》,406页。罗伯特·奥弗顿也引用了这句话:见诺布鲁克,“脸红的致敬”,234.38尼希米·罗杰斯在《没有无花果的无花果树》中引用多恩为“博学的医生”,第13和248页以及《富有的傻瓜》,109.39格里夫斯,“约翰·罗杰斯(b. 1627)”,ODNB.40约翰·罗杰斯,Ohel or Beth-Shemesh, 378.41同上,390页。史密斯,《完美宣言》,36年;格里本,《清教徒的千年》,212年,注意到罗杰斯对多恩的暗示。42诺布鲁克,《绯红的贡品》,220年。43肖克罗斯两次声称佩恩是“圣公会教徒”,但在这两个地方都没有给出证据:“佩恩,菲利普(1647-1667),诗人”,ANB,提到了相反的指控,以及“一些殖民时期的美国作家”,36年。鉴于公理会是在马萨诸塞州建立起来的,我认为举证责任在于学者坚持认为这个殖民地的成员是“英国国教”。44例:沃伦,《爱德华·泰勒的诗歌》和华莱士·凯布尔·布朗,《爱德华·泰勒:一个美国的“形而上学”》;关于多恩和泰勒共同的诗学的更近期的评价,见金伯利·约翰逊,《成为肉体》,例如88-89:“就像泰勒的月经诗学一样,多恩的隐喻重新赋予了肉体的意义... .正如泰勒所做的那样,多恩在他的布道中留下了一个健康的元评论,对那些使他的诗歌充满活力的担忧进行了评论托马斯·h·约翰逊,《爱德华·泰勒:一位清教徒的“神圣诗人”》,322.46肖克罗斯,《一些美国殖民地作家》,36.47同上,33.48同上,36.49哈罗德·s·扬茨,《新英格兰诗歌的第一个世纪》,423.50肖克罗斯,《一些美国殖民地作家》,39.51戴利,芭芭拉。“奥克斯,乌里安(1631 - 1681年7月25日)”,ANB.52肖克罗斯,“一些殖民时期的美国作家”,41.53哈里森T.马塞罗尔,17世纪的美国诗歌(纽约,1968年),213-14.54多恩的作品在18世纪早期开始出现在拍卖目录中:早期美国印记数据库在1719年的目录中列出了Biathanatos,在1720.55年的“论文”中列出了多恩的“论文”,Scott-Bauman,《参与的形式》126,和Norbrook,《害羞的致敬》234,都声称多恩在清教徒中很受欢迎,但都没有给出多恩在奥弗顿和哈钦森之外的清教徒读者的例子。Scott-Bauman引用了Lewalski的《Donne’s anniversary and Poetry of Praise》(1973)来为自己的观点辩护,特别提到了Daniel Price和Andrew Marvell,但是Price虽然是一个坚定的加尔文主义者,但却是赫里福德的院长,死于1631年。莱瓦尔斯基对多恩遗产的研究停留在1650年代的马维尔身上,马维尔的教会论很滑头芭芭拉·塔夫特,“奥弗顿,罗伯特(1608/9-1678/9),国会军官”,odn57 .57诺布鲁克,“羞红的致敬”,236.58杰西·霍克,唯物主义的情色,118-44,讨论了哈钦森对卢克莱特主题的使用,她的圣经史诗《秩序与无序》以及她为约翰·哈钦森写的挽歌。59斯科特-鲍曼,《交战的形式》,126.60同上,135-36.61霍克,唯物主义的情色,135.62诺布鲁克,“露西·哈钦森的“挽歌”505-6,511。在第480页,诺布鲁克断言“复苏”也让人想起了“禁止哀悼”哈钦森,《秩序与无序》,172-73.64海伦·威尔科克斯,《在圣殿区》,264页。
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SEVENTEENTH CENTURY
SEVENTEENTH CENTURY MEDIEVAL & RENAISSANCE STUDIES-
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期刊介绍: The Seventeenth Century is an interdisciplinary journal which aims to encourage the study of the period in a way that looks beyond national boundaries or the limits of narrow intellectual approaches. Its intentions are twofold: to serve as a forum for interdisciplinary approaches to seventeenth-century studies, and at the same time to offer to a multidisciplinary readership stimulating specialist studies on a wide range of subjects. There is a general preference for articles embodying original research.
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The political thought of the English free state, 1649–1653 The political thought of the English free state, 1649–1653 , by Markku Peltonen, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2022, 270 pp., £75.00 (hardback), ISBN 9781009212045 Elizabeth Currer: religious non-conformity in John Dryden’s The Kind-Keeper and Aphra Behn’s The Widdow Ranter Literature and Natural Theology in Early Modern England Literature and Natural Theology in Early Modern England , by Katherine Calloway, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2023, 249 pp., £85.00 (hardback), ISBN 9781009415262 Hospitality towards European travellers in Latin America in the colonial middle George Wither and the New World
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