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Reference
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Cambridge History
>
Cavalier and Puritan
>
Cavalier Lyrists
> The classical lyric
Decline of the sonnet
Influence of Jonson
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
Volume VII. Cavalier and Puritan.
I.
Cavalier Lyrists
.
§ 3. The classical lyric.
The classical lyric, as represented, in particular, by the odes of Anacreon and the songs of Catullus and Horace, had been regarded with due respect already in the early days of the renascence. The Anacreontic temper is seen in such a song as Greenes Cupid abroad was lated in the night from
Orpharion
(licensed 1589) and in Lodges
Barginet of Antimachus
from
Englands Helicon,
while translations or imitations of Anacreon find a place in
Canzonets to foure voyces,
set to music and published by Giles Farnaby in 1598. Spenser introduces into his gorgeous painting of the Bower of Bliss the theme of Ausoniuss famous lyric,
Collige, virgo, rosas;
and, among many English renderings of Catulluss famous song to Lesbia,
Vivamus, mea Lesbia, atque amemus,
none comes so near to the spirit of the original as Campions My sweetest Lesbia, let us live and love. The influence of Catullus is seen, too, in most of the Elizabethan wedding-odes, while renderings of the famous
Integer vitae
ode of Horace are frequently met with before 1600. But, until the coming of Ben Jonson, the influence of the classical lyric on English poetry was fitful and uncertain. Its supporters, only too often, had followed wandering fires; and, led astray by metrical heresies, their classicism had found expression in the attempt to reproduce in rimeless quantitative verse the Sapphic or Anacreontic measures of antiquity.
4
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Decline of the sonnet
Influence of Jonson
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