A History of English Literature

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Overview


The hopes of the humanists and the writers of the early Renaissance were cut


short by the turmoil of the Reformation and the despotism of Henry VIII. A


literary Renaissance was triumphantly relaunched in the late 1570s by Sidney


and Spenser, and the 1590s produced – besides the drama – an unprece-


dented abundance of non-dramatic poets and translators. This literary golden


age also saw a variety of prose, artful, lively and dignified.


Medieval and Modern: a caution


As the first two chapters of this book will have demonstrated, the popular notion
that English literature really begins with Shakespeare is a mistake. The educated
notion that it begins with the Renaissance is also a mistake. These are inherited
mistakes, arising from pride in England becoming an independent nation-state after
Henry VIII broke with Rome and with Europe. A nationalist pride is a constant
theme in Protestant and Whig projections of national history, projections which
went uncorrected until the 20th century. But even in the vernacular, and even if we
omit the literary achievements of the Anglo-Saxons, the text of this Historyso far
will have shown that English literature is not the same as modern English literature.
Drama goes back long before Chaucer. Poetry reached the highest international
standards in the late 14th century. Prose reached maturity in the works of Julian of
Norwich and Sir Thomas Malory. Modern English literature was therefore in full
swing long before the reign of Henry VIII.


nRenaissance and Reformation


The Renaissance


In 1550, the painter Georgio Vasari wrote of a rinascità in the arts in his native
Florence and in Italy in the 15th century, a ‘rebirth’. The French 19th-century histo-
rian Jules Michelet extended this idea of a ‘renaissance’ from the Italian 15th century,
the Quattrocento, to a general cultural renewal in western Europe beginning earlier.


Contents
Renaissance and
Reformation 77
The Renaissance 77
Expectations 79
Investigations 79
England’s place in the
world 80
The Reformation 81

Sir Thomas More


The Courtier 83
Sir Thomas Wyatt 84
The Earl of Surrey 86
Religious prose 87
Bible translation 87
Instructive prose 89
Drama 90
Elizabethan liter ature 92
Verse 92
Sir Philip Sidney 92
Edmund Spenser 97

Sir Walter Raleigh


Elizabethan and
Jacobean 103
Christopher Marlowe 103
Song 104
Thomas Campion 105
Prose 105
John Lyly 105
Thomas Nashe 106
Richard Hooker 106
Further reading 107

77

Tudor Literature:

1500–1603

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CHAPTER

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