Posts tagged Early Modern Lit

Although Marlowe’s play Doctor Faustus ends with the protagonist’s supposed damnation - he has sold his soul to the Devil in exchange for forbidden knowledge - the scholar-necromancer is really a hero to Marlowe, whose conquests of knowledge, like Tamburlaine’s conquests of territory in Marlowe’s other (two-part) hit play, wowed audiences in the 1590s with their picture of moral defiance. Marlowe no more expects his audience to succumb to a Christian or moral view of the world, having seen the downfall of Doctor Faustus, than the fans of 1970s rock bands would be deterred from a wild way of life by one of their idols taking an overdose or dying a violent death. The terrible end is part of the daredevil thrill.
A.N. Wilson - The Elizabethans (via earlofmarsden)

culturenlifestyle:

A 16th Century Book Which Can Be Read in Six Different Ways

Printed in Germany, this small book is an example of sixfold dos-à-dos binding in the sixteenth century. Found in the National Library of Sweden, this vintage beauty is a religious text was created by the attachment of six books into a single publication with the help of six perfectly placed clasps. 

What guyle is this, that those her golden tresses,
She doth attyre under a net of gold:
And why sly skill so cunningly them dresses,
That which is gold or heare, may scarse be told?
Is it that mens frayle eyes, which gaze too bold,
She may entangle in that golden snare?
And being caught may craftily enfold
Theyr weaker harts, which are not wel aware?
Take heed therefore, myne eyes, how ye doe stare
Henceforth too rashly on the guilefull net,
In which if ever ye entrapped are,
Out of her bands ye by no means shall get.
Fondnesse it were for any being free,
To covet fetters, though they golden bee.
Sonnet 37 - Edmund Spenser (via enigmaticrose)

Ben Jonson fan or simply a conisseur of all things Early Modern? Check out this article by Adam Hooks about breaking apart and down the physical entity that is Ben Jonson's Workes. Very interesting read.