Triumphal Forms: Structural Patterns in Elizabethan Poetry

by Alastair Fowler

Hardcover, 1970

Status

Available

Call number

821.309

Genres

Collection

Publication

Cambridge University Press (1970), Edition: 1st, 247 pages

Description

A study of numerology in Elizabethan poetry, with some background studies which base the subject in classical learning, the works of Dante and Petrarch, and the esoteric traditions of the humanists. The central assumption of numerological criticism is that there exist works written in this tradition which show a correspondence between structure and meaning on a numerical plane; that is, one in which the number of the constituent parts (lines, stanzas, sonnets in a sequence) expresses a major aspect of the meaning. For instance parts of the whole can be arranged to represent months of the year and so on. Such structures of time and the triumphal form, in which the most important 'sovereign' element is placed at the centre, are the two main numerological patterns discussed by Dr Fowler. Critics have tended to regard numerology as an isolated phenomenon, rare after the Middle Ages but Dr Fowler demonstrates its persistence in the works of Spenser, Sidney, Chapman, Shakespeare, Donne, Jonson, Dryden and others.… (more)

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

247 p.; 6.22 inches

ISBN

0521077478 / 9780521077477

Local notes

Recommended by Ira Steingroot, while he was reading Sir Philip Sydney's 'Astrophil & Stella.'
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