Literature and nature in the English Renaissance an ecocritical anthology

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adam_text CONTENTS List ofIllustrations Acknowledgements Editorial Principles: Towards the Ecocritical Editing of Renaissance Texts page xv xvi xviii Introduction i PART I Cosmologies Creation and the State of Nature “The Creation of the World,” from Genesis (c. 900-500 все; the Geneva translation 1560) Ovid, “The Creation,” “The Four Ages,” and “The Oration of Pythagoras” (4 все — շ ce; Arthur Golding translation 1567) Lucretius, “That the World Was Not Created for Mankind’s Sake” and “The First Productions of the Earth” (c. 55 все; Lucy Hutchinson translation c. 1650s) Philip Sidney, “As I my little flock on Ister Bank” (c. 1580) William Shakespeare, “Each thing’s a Thief,” from Timon ofAthens (c. 1606) John Norden, “The state of this island of Great Britain at the beginning” (1607) Thomas Traherne, “Dumbness” (c. 16Ճ0) Lucy Hutchinson, [The Third Day] and [The Naming of the Animals] (c. 1670s) Natural Theologies Psalm 104 (c. 900-400 все; Mary Sidney translation c. 1599) Guillaume de Salluste Du Bartas, “The World’s a Book in Folio” (1578; Joshua Sylvester translation 1605) Giordano Bruno, “The World Soul” (1584) Richard Hooker, “The Law Which Natural Agents Have Given Them to Observe” (1593) John Donne, “Why are we by all Creatures waited on?” (c. 1609) 25 27 27 30 36 38 43 44 46 49 52 52 55 57 60 63 Contents VI Walter Ralegh, “How It Is To Be Understood That the Spirit of God Moved Upon the Waters” and “That Nature Is No Principium. Per Se” (1614) George Wither, “Song for Rogation Week” (1623) John Milton, “On the Morning of Christ’s Nativity” (1629) George Herbert, “Man” and “Providence” (1633) Thomas Browne, “Nature is the Art of God” (c. 1635) Thomasine Pendarves, [Embracing the Creatures] (1649) Joseph Caryl, “To cause it to rain on the earth where no man is” (1633) John Ray, from The Wisdom of God Manifested in the Works of Creation (1691) PART II The Tangled Chain Hierarchy and the Human Animal Ambroise Paré, “Of Monsters by the Confusion of Seed of Diverse Kinds” (1572; Thomas Johnson translation 1634) Reginald Scot, “That the Body of a Man Cannot Be Turned into the Body of a Beast by a Witch” (1584) Michel de Montaigne, “Apology for Raymond Sebond” (c. 1580; John Fiorio translation c. 1603) Francis Bacon, “Prometheus, or the State of Man” (1609; Arthur Gorges translation 1619) René Descartes, “The Animal Machine” (1637; anonymous translation 1649) Margaret Cavendish, [Animal Intelligence] (1664) John Bulwer, “Man was at first but a kind of Ape” (1650) Ann Conway, “This Transmutation of Things out of one Species into another” (c. 1675) from Anonymous, from Scala Natura (1695) Beasts 63 65 66 70 75 77 79 81 85 87 87 89 91 99 102 103 105 107 no 113 Edward Töpseli, [Dedicatory Epistle] and “Of the Unicorn,” from A History ofFour-Footed Beasts (1607) Thomas Heyrick, “On an Ape” (1691) William Shakespeare, [The Courser and the Jennet], from Venus and Adonis (1593) John Harington, “My Dog Bungay” (1608) William Baldwin, from Beware the Cat (c. 1553) Kenelm Digby, “Concerning the Invention of Foxes and Other Beasts” and “Of the Several Cryings and Tones of Beasts” (1644) Thomas Tryon, “Of the Language of Sheep” (1684) 113 1x7 118 121 123 126 129 Contents Jacques Du Fouilloux, “The Badger” (1561; George Gascoigne translation 1575) Richard Brathwaite, “The Squirrel” and “The Hedgehog” (1634) Edward May, “On a Toad” (1633) John Derricke, “[Why] the Irish ground . neither brcedeth nor fostereth up any venomous beast or worm” (1581) Birds John Skelton, “Speak, Parrot” (c. 1521) Henry Vaughan, “The Eagle” (1655) George Morley, “The Nightingale” (c. 1633) William Turner, [The Kite] (1555) and [The Robin and Redstart] (1544) Henry Chillester, “A Commendation of the Robin Redbreast” (1579) Richard Brathwaite, “The Lapwing” and “The Swallow” (1621) Anonymous, A Battle ofBirds (1621) Hester Pulter, “The Lark” (c. 1655) John Caius, “Of the Puffin” (1570) William Harvey and Francis Willoughby, [Gannets at Bass Rock] (1633, 1661) Fish Edmund Spenser, “Huge Sea monsters” (1590) Tomos Prys, “The Porpoise” (c. 1594-1600) Michael Drayton, [Fish in the River Trent] (1622) Izaak Walton, “Observations of the Salmon” and “Observations of the Eel” (1655) Insects Thomas Moffett, from The Theatre ofInsects (1589) Charles Butler, from The Feminine Monarchy, or a Treatise Concerning Bees (1609) Richard Lovelace, “The Ant” (c. 1655) Margaret Cavendish, “Of the Spider” (1653) Anonymous, “Upon the biting of Fleas” (c. 1650) Plants Edmund Spenser, [The Oak and the Briar] (1579) William Lawson, [The Size and Age ofTrees] (1618) William Strode, “On a Great Hollow Tree” (c. 1634) vii 130 132 135 135 138 138 140 141 143 145 147 149 153 155 156 158 158 160 162 163 167 167 169 172 174 174 177 177 ։8i 183 viii Contents Robert Herrick, “The Willow Tree,” “The Vine,” “Parliament of Roses to Julia,” and “Divination by a Daffodil” (1648) Anonymous, [The Crab-tree’s Lament] (1558) William Turner, Orobanche” (1568) John Gerard, from The Herbal (1597) John Donne, [The Mandrake] (1601) John Heywood, “A Rose and a Nettle” (1550) Francis Bacon, “Sympathy and Antipathy of Plants” (c. 1625) Gems, Metals, Elements, Atoms John Maplet, “Sovereign Virtues in Stones” (1567) Anne Bradstreet, “The Four Elements” (1650) Margaret Cavendish, “Motion directs, while Atoms dance” and “A World in an Earring” (1653) PART III Time and Place Seasons Henry Howard, “Description of Spring” (c. 1535) Alexander Hume, “Of the Day Estival” (1599) Nicholas Breton, “Harvest” and “October” (1626) Alexander Barclay, “The winter snows, all covered is the ground” (c. 1518) 186 188 189 191 194 195 196 198 198 201 202 205 207 207 208 2x3 214 Country Houses George Gascoigne, [The Wild Man of Kenilworth] (1575) Aemelia Lanyer, “The Description of Cookham” (1610) Ben Jonson, “To Penshurst” (c. 1611) Thomas Carew, “To Saxham” (c. 1635) Andrew Marvell, “Upon Appleton House” (c. 1651) 217 217 218 222 225 226 Gardens Thomas Hill, “Rare inventions and defences for most seeds” (1577) Anonymous, “The Mole-catcher’s Speech” (1591) William Shakespeare, [The Duke of York’s Garden] from RichardII{ c. 1595) Francis Bacon, “Of Gardens” (1625) Andrew Marvell, “The Garden” and “The Mower against Gardens” (c. 1651) Abraham Cowley, “The Garden” (1667) 232 232 234 235 237 240 243 Contents ix Pastoral: Pastures, Meadows, Plains, Downs Philip Sidney, from The Arcadia (c. 1585) Richard Barnfield, from The Ajfectionate Shepherd (1594) Michael Drayton, “A Nice Description of Cotswold” (1612) William Browne, “The Swineherd” (1614) William Strode, “On Westwell Downs” (c. 1640) Robert Herrick, “To Meadows” (1648) John Aubrey, [Salisbury Plains and the Downs] (c. 1656-1685) 246 246 248 250 252 253 254 Georgie: Fields, Farms Virgil, from Georgies (c. 29 net; Thomas May translation 1628) Thomas Tusser, “The Praise of Husbandry” (1570) Hugh Plat, “A Philosophical Garden,” “Gillyflowers,” and “Grafting” (1608) Margaret Cavendish, “Earth’s Complaint” (1653) 258 Forests, Woods, Parks William Harrison, “Of Parks and Warrens” (1577) Philip Sidney, “O sweet woods” (c. 1580) Nicholas Breton, “Now lies this walk along a wilderness” (1592) John Manwood, “The Definition of a Forest” (1598) Anthony Bradshaw, “A Friend’s Due Commendation of Duffield Frith” (c. 1588-1608) Michael Drayton, “The Forest of Arden” (1612) Edward Herbert, “Made upon the Groves near Merlow Castle” (1620) Mary Wroth, [Pamphilia’s Tree-Carving] (1621) William Habington, “To Castara, venturing to walk too far in the neighbouring wood” (1633) Katherine Philips, “Upon the graving of her Name upon a Tree in Barn Elms’ Walks” (1669) Heaths, Moors John Norden, “Heathy Ground” (1607) John Speed, [Norfolk Heaths and Yorkshire Dales] (1612) Tristram Risdon, [Dartmoor and the Devonshire Countryside] (c. 1633) Richard James, [Pendle Hill and the Wild Moorlands] (1636) Gerrard Winstanley, “The barren land shall be made fruitful” (1649) 255 258 260 261 264 265 265 266 268 270 273 276 280 281 284 284 286 286 287 288 290 291 x Contents Mountains, Hills, Vales Robert Southwell, “A Vale of Tears” (c. 1578) Thomas Churchyard, “A Discourseof Mountains” (1587) William Browne, “A Landscape” and “Description of a Solitary Vale” (1613) Thomas Hobbes, from The Wonders ofthe Peak (c. 1627) Anne Kemp, “A Contemplation on Bassets Down Hill” (c. 1658) Thomas Burnet, “Concerning the Mountains of the Earth” (1684) Jane Barker, “The Prospect of a Landscape, Beginning with a Grove” (1688) 292 292 294 Lakes, Rivers, Oceans Richard Brathwaite, “The Lake” (1634) William Browne, [Marina and the River-God] (1613) John Taylor, from Taylor on Thame Isis (1632) Henry Vaughan, “To the River Usk” (1651) John Donne, “The Storm” and “The Calm” (1597) Samuel Daniel, [Milford Haven] (1610) Anonymous, A Poetical Sea-Piece (1633) Margaret Cavendish, “Similarizing the Sea to Meadows and Pastures” (1653) Thomas Heyrick, from “The Submarine Voyage” (1691) 307 307 308 310 312 315 317 320 PART IV Interactions Animal-Baiting 297 299 301 303 305 322 323 327 329 Robert Laneham, [Bear-Baiting at Kenilworth] (1575) Philip Stubbes, “Bear-baiting and other Exercises Used Unlawfully in Ailgna” (1583) Robert Wild, “The Combat of the Cocks” (1637) 329 Hunting, Hawking John Caius, “Why there are no wolves in England” (1570) George Gascoigne, “The Woeful Words of the Hart to the Hunter” and “The Otter’s Oration” (1575) Henry Porter, [Lady Smith’s Denunciation of the Hunt] (1597) Jonas Poole, [Killing Polar Bears and Walrus in the Arctic] (1606,1609) Margaret Cavendish, “The Huntingof the Hare” (1653) George Turberville, “In Commendation of Hawking” (1575) 336 336 330 333 337 341 343 347 350 Contents Fishing John Dee, “Manifold disorder used about fry and spawn” (l577) „ . . Thomas Bastard, “There is no fish in brooks” and “De Piscatione” (1598) John Dennys, fromThe Secrets ofAnglingi 1613) Timothy Granger, Seventeen Monstrous Fishes Taken in Suffolk (1568) Edmund Waller, from “The Battle of the Summer Islands” (l645) 353 353 354 355 358 359 Pet-Keeping John Caius, “Of the delicate, neat, and pretty kind of dogs called the Spaniel Gentle, orthe Comforter” (1570) John Piarington, “To His Wife, for striking her Dog” (c. 1600) Anonymous, “The Old Woman’s Legacy to Her Cat” (1695) George Gifford, [Witches’ Familiars] (1593) Cooking, Feasting, Fasting, Healing Thomas Dawson, from The Good Hotisewife’s Jewel (1587) Thomas Nashe, “Nature in England is But Plain Dame” (1592) John Harington, “Against Feasting” and “In Defence of Lent” (c. 1600) Thomas Middleton, from A Chaste Maid in Cheapside (c. 1613) Thomas Moffett, “Of Fatting of Meats” (1655) Thomas Tryon, “The Voice of the Dumb, or the Complaints of the Creatures” (1691) John Fletcher, “Enter Clorin the Shepherdess, sorting of herbs and telling the natures of them” (1610) Aletheia Talbot, from Natura Exenterata (1655) William Cole, “Of the Signatures of Plants” (1656) Margaret Baker, “Of Millefettille or Yarrow and His Great Virtue” (c. 1675) PART V XI 363 363 364 364 365 369 369 371 372 374 377 379 383 385 390 392 Environmental Problems in Early Modern England 393 Population Thomas Harriot, “An estimable reckoning how many persons may inhabit the whole world” (c. 1590) Thomas Dekker and Thomas Middleton, “The Necessity of a Plague” (1603) 395 395 396 xii Contents Thomas Freeman, “London’s Progress”(1614) Walter Ralegh, “Necessary War” (c. 1615) Gabriel Plattes, from A Discovery ofInfinite Treasure (1639) William Petty, from An Essay Concerning the Multiplication ofMankind (1682) Enclosure Thomas More, “English Sheep Devourers of Men” (1516; Ralph Robinson translation 1551) Thomas Bastard, “Sheep have eat up our meadows and our downs” and “When the great forests” dwelling was so wide” (1598) John Harington, “Of Sheep Turned Wolves” (c. 1600) John Taylor, from Taylor’s Pastoral (1624) Anonymous, “The Diggers of Warwickshire to all other Diggers” (1607) Gerrard Winstanley et al, from The True Levellers’ Standard Advanced (1649) Henry King, “Woe to the worldly men” (1657) 397 398 400 401 4°3 403 405 405 406 408 409 411 Deforestation Robin Clidro, “Marchan Wood” (c. 1545—1580) Anonymous, “Glyn Cynon Wood” (c. 1600) William Harrison, “Of Woods” (1577) John Lyly, “The Crime of Erysichthon” (c. 1588) John Harington, “Of the Growth ofTrees, to Sir Hugh Portman” (c. 1600) John Norden, “Articles of Inquiry from a Court of Survey” and “Gentlemen Sell Their Woods too Fast” (1607) Michael Drayton, [Deforestation in Poly-Olbion\ (1612, 1622) Michael Drayton, “The Tenth Nymphal” (1630) Gerard Boate, “Woods much diminished in Ireland since the first coming in of the English” (1645) Margaret Cavendish, “A Dialogue between an Oak and a Man cutting him down” (1653) Abraham Cowley, [The Oak’s Prophecy] (1662; Aphra Behn translation 1689) John Aubrey, “This whole island was anciently one great forest” (c. 1656-1685) 413 413 414 416 418 422 426 430 The Draining of the Fens Michael Drayton, “Holland Fen” (1622) Ben Jonson, “The Duke of Drowned Land” (1616) Penny of Wisbech, “The Pout’s Complaint” (c. 1619) 448 448 452 454 422 434 435 441 445 Contents Anonymous, “The Draining of the Fens” (c. 1620-1660) Gerard Boate, “Draining of the Bogs practised by the English in Ireland” (1645) John Bünyan, “The Slough of Despond” (c. 1660-1678) Samuel Fortrey?, “A True and Natural Description of the Great Level of the Fens” (c. 1660-1680) xiii 457 458 460 462 Pollution Edmund Spenser, [Mammon’s Delve] (1590) Gawin Smith, “For the Cleansing and Clean Keeping and Continuing Sweet of the Ditches about the Walls of London” (c. 1610) Ben Jonson, “On the Famous Voyage” (1616) Patrick Hannay, “Croydon clothed in black” (1622) Hugh Plat, “Sea-coal sweetened and multiplied” (1603) Thomas Middleton, “The Mist of Error” (1613) William Strode, [The Chimney-Sweeper’s Song] (c. 1640) Anonymous, “Upon the Foggy Air, Sea-coal Smoke, Dirt, Filth, and Mire of London,” (c. 1640-1660) William Davenant, “London is smothered with sulph’rous fires” (1656) John Evelyn, from Fumifugium (1661) 469 469 Disaster and Resilience in the Little Ice Age 495 PART VI Extreme Weather, Disorder, Dearth John Heywood, from The Play ofthe Weather (1533) Roger Ascham, [The Wind on the Snow] (1545) Thomas Hill, “The End, Effect, and Signification of Comets” (1567) Abraham Fleming, “A Terrible Tempest in Norfolk” (1577) Thomas Nashe, “Backwinter” (c. 1592-1600) Ludwig Lavater and William Barlow, “Dearth” (1596) John Stradling, “The Incredible Flooding of the Severn” and “Another Poem on the Flood” (1607) William Browne, “As Tavy creeps” (1613) Thomas Dekker?, The Great Frost (1608) John Taylor, “The Frozen Age” (1621) William Cartwright, “On the Great Frost, 1634” (1634) Henry Coventry, “On the Dry Summer” (1636) Gabriel Plattes, “Islands of Ice” (1639) John Evelyn, “The Freezing of the Thames” (1684) 471 473 477 479 481 483 486 487 488 497 497 500 501 503 504 510 515 517 518 522 524 526 528 529 Contents XIV Decay John Liiliat, “Finding few fruit upon the Oak” (c. 1596) Thomas Bastard, “Our fathers did but use the world before” (1598) Edmund Spenser, “Two Cantos of Mutability” (c. 1598) John Donne, from An Anatomy ofthe World (1611) Resilience Joachim Du Bellay, “Then I beheld the fair Dodonian tree” (1558; Edmund Spenser translation 1569) George Wither, “A Posteritatk He that delights to Plant and Set” (c. 1620) George Hakewill, “Of this Pretended Decay” (1627) Michael Drayton, from “Noah’s Flood” (1630) Appendix A Appendix В Industrialization and Environmental Legislation in the Early Anthropocene: A Timeline Further Reading: A Bibliography ofEnvironmental Scholarship on the English Renaissance 531 531 531 532 547 554 554 555 556 559 564 581 Featuring over two hundred nature-themed texts that span the disciplines of literature, science and history, this sourcebook offers an accessible field guide to the environment of Renaissance England, revealing a nation at a crossroads between its pastoral heritage and industrialized future. Carefully selected primary sources, each modernized and prefaced with an introduction, survey an encyclopaedic array of topographies, species, and topics: from astrology to zoology, bear-baiting to bee-keeping, coal-mining to tree-planting, fen-draining to sheep-whispering. The familiar voices of Spenser, Shakespeare, Jonson, and Marvell mingle with a diverse chorus of farmers, herbalists, shepherds, hunters, foresters, philosophers, sailors, sky-watchers, and duchesses—as well as ventriloquized beasts, trees, and rivers. Lavishly illustrated, the anthology is supported by a lucid introduction that outlines and intervenes in key debates in Renaissance ecocriticism, a reflective essay on ecocritical editing, a bibliography of further reading, and a timeline of environmental history and legislation drawing on extensive archival research.
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genre (DE-588)4002214-6 Anthologie gnd-content
genre_facet Anthologie
id DE-604.BV045501890
illustrated Not Illustrated
indexdate 2025-02-03T17:57:29Z
institution BVB
isbn 9781316510155
language English
oai_aleph_id oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-030886583
oclc_num 1111896550
open_access_boolean
owner DE-703
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DE-355
DE-BY-UBR
DE-384
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owner_facet DE-703
DE-19
DE-BY-UBM
DE-355
DE-BY-UBR
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DE-11
physical xxi, 602 Seiten
publishDate 2019
publishDateSearch 2019
publishDateSort 2019
publisher Cambridge University Press
record_format marc
spellingShingle Literature and nature in the English Renaissance an ecocritical anthology
Natur Motiv (DE-588)4115346-7 gnd
Umwelt Motiv (DE-588)4121809-7 gnd
Ecocriticism (DE-588)4790005-2 gnd
Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 gnd
Literatur (DE-588)4035964-5 gnd
subject_GND (DE-588)4115346-7
(DE-588)4121809-7
(DE-588)4790005-2
(DE-588)4014777-0
(DE-588)4035964-5
(DE-588)4002214-6
title Literature and nature in the English Renaissance an ecocritical anthology
title_auth Literature and nature in the English Renaissance an ecocritical anthology
title_exact_search Literature and nature in the English Renaissance an ecocritical anthology
title_full Literature and nature in the English Renaissance an ecocritical anthology edited by Todd Andrew Borlik, University of Huddersfield
title_fullStr Literature and nature in the English Renaissance an ecocritical anthology edited by Todd Andrew Borlik, University of Huddersfield
title_full_unstemmed Literature and nature in the English Renaissance an ecocritical anthology edited by Todd Andrew Borlik, University of Huddersfield
title_short Literature and nature in the English Renaissance
title_sort literature and nature in the english renaissance an ecocritical anthology
title_sub an ecocritical anthology
topic Natur Motiv (DE-588)4115346-7 gnd
Umwelt Motiv (DE-588)4121809-7 gnd
Ecocriticism (DE-588)4790005-2 gnd
Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 gnd
Literatur (DE-588)4035964-5 gnd
topic_facet Natur Motiv
Umwelt Motiv
Ecocriticism
Englisch
Literatur
Anthologie
url http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=030886583&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA
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