Seven Minor Epics of the English Renaissance (1596-1624)

audiobook

Seven Minor Epics of the English Renaissance (1596-1624)

by active 1611 William Barksted, Dunstan Gale, Richard Linche, Samuel Page

EN·~5 hours

Chapters

Description

This volume gathers seven forgotten minor epics from the English Renaissance, offering a vivid glimpse into a literary form that once paralleled the sonnet and pastoral. Produced between the late 1590s and the early 1620s, these poems were originally printed in small, often single‑issue editions, and have survived only in fragile copies. Their revival lets listeners hear the lively language and inventive storytelling that defined the epyllion.

The collection opens with a tender tale of Philos and Licia, a courtly romance that unfolds in lyrical exchanges and sudden turns of fate. Other pieces reinterpret classical myths—Pyramus and Thisbe, Mirrha the mother of Adonis, and Hiren, a Greek heroine—while remaining grounded in the concerns of contemporary love and ambition. The love stories of Dom Diego and Ginevra, and of Amos and Laura, blend witty banter with moral reflection, and The Scourge of Venus delivers a playful yet pointed commentary on desire.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~5 hours (291K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by David Starner, Stephanie Eason, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net.

Release date

2009-08-02

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the authors

A1

active 1611 William Barksted

A shadowy figure from England’s early modern stage, this actor-poet is remembered for a pair of mythological narrative poems and a brief, intriguing trail through Jacobean theater records.

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DG

Dunstan Gale

An elusive figure from the English Renaissance, known almost entirely through a single surviving poem, offers a small but intriguing glimpse into late 16th-century literary culture.

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RL

Richard Linche

An Elizabethan poet and translator, he is best remembered for Diella and for bringing classical myth into English prose. Though little is known about his life, his surviving work offers a vivid glimpse of literary culture in the late 1590s.

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SP

Samuel Page

1574–1630

An English clergyman and poet from the late Elizabethan and early Stuart period, he was known in his youth for love poetry and later for sermons and devotional writing. His career joined church life, naval chaplaincy, and literary ambition in a distinctly early modern way.

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