Renaissance Country House poetry country house poetry is a subtype of Renaissance poetry, first written in the 17th century. It is closely related to sponsored poetry, where the poet (sometimes arrogant) praises patrons for sponsorship and status. At the moment, many houses were built in the countryside as a wealth display and as a retreat when the court was overwhelmed by courtroom or city life. Initially, the country house was not a big house in the country where the rich lived.
Renaissance poetry tends to include a more realistic element of the poet than it is found in the early days of poetry. Renaissance poets tend to increase the importance of traditional Latin in their mother tongue. These poets also tend to focus on the sarcastic and satirical situation seen in life. The most famous Renaissance poets of this period were Christopher Marlow and William Shakespeare. As a characteristic of Neoclassical era, the poet of this era tends to be separated from the idea refined by Renaissance writers. Therefore, they wrote several poems on the importance of order, correctness, and restraint. Their poetry focuses on the importance of reestablishing the classic poetry format (the most common usage of rhyming rhyming at this time). The most famous poets of this era were Pope Alexandre, John Dryden and John Milton.
In the Renaissance era, various theories of poetry and the nature of the poet coexisted. In the refinement of these theories, the Renaissance poet and the critic have borrowed some important classical texts, but modified them according to their Christian faith. Aristotle's poetry (little known in the Middle Ages) and Horace's poetry art is the most important thing. Education of Aristotle's rhetoric, Cicero's speaker and speaker, and Quintill's speaker. Plato is generally affected by the reinterpretation of neoprene tonics, but all three works, including poetic theory, directly or indirectly, Ion, Phaedrus, and Republic X are all read by myself. Educational theory of poetry is influenced by small article by Plutarch, how young people study poetry