Age of Spenser - Literary Style

LITERARY STYLE

William Rossky (essay date 1989)

SOURCE: "Imagination in the English Renaissance: Psychology and Poetic," in Studies in the Renaissance, Vol. V, 1989, pp. 49-73.

[Below, Rossky discusses the Renaissance notion of the poet's proper use of imagination—that imaginative writing must be based upon accurate perceptions, but that controlled and disciplined artifice can actually aid the poet in reconstructing objective, real events.]

Shakespeare couples lunatic, lover, and poet as 'of imagination all compact' (Dream v.i.7-8); Spenser finds that Phantasies' chamber is filled with 'leasings, tales, and lies' (F.Q. II.ix.51.9) and that his eyes seem 'mad or foolish' (F.Q. II.ix.52.7); Drayton speaks of the 'doting trumperie' of imagination;1 when men's minds become 'inflamed', says Bacon, 'it is all done by stimulating the imagination till it becomes ungovernable, and not only sets reason at...

[The entire page is 11611 words long]

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