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George Sandys Travel, Colonialism and Tolerance in the Seventeenth Century James Ellison The poet George Sandys is one of the most interesting figures of the Renaissance period, his life and career encompassing a number of varied aspects. As a colonialist leader in Virginia he and his colleagues pursued a lenient policy towards the Indians which nearly cost the colony its existence. Returning to England, and settling at Great Tew along with other poets such as William Chillingworth and Lord Falkland, he won limited favour at the Caroline court; although he was loyal to the king, and adopted a richly Laudian style for his religious verse, he was implacably opposed to the divisive and confrontational policies of the Laudian church, and became an increasingly outspoken critic of absolutist government. His last work, a translation of a Latin religious play by Hugo Grotius, was the first in a series of literary attacks by moderate Royalists on Archbishop Laud. This book, the first recent examination of his life and work, sheds new light both on an unjustly neglected figure, and on the literature of religious and political moderation prior to the Civil War. JAMES ELLISON is Honorary Research Fellow at the University of Strathclyde. |
DETAILS 296 pagesSize: 23.4 x 15.6 cm 10 digit ISBN: 0859917509 13 digit ISBN: 9780859917506 Binding: Hardback First published: 31/Oct/2002 Price: 115.00 USD / 60.00 GBP Imprint: D. S. Brewer Series: Studies in Renaissance Literature Subject: English & American Literature BIC class: CSBD STATUS: Available Details updated on 03/07/2008 | |||||||
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