From the 15th century to the 16th century, British poetry was part of the Renaissance era (1500-1660) or Neoclassical era (1660-1798). That said, many critics are difficult to agree on the exact dates of a certain literary era and the dates that people think are inconsistent.
Renaissance poetry tends to contain more true poets than earlier verses of poetry.
From the 15th century to the 16th century, British poetry was part of the Renaissance era (1500-1660) or Neoclassical era (1660-1798). That said, many critics are difficult to agree on the exact dates of a certain literary era and the dates that people think are inconsistent.
Renaissance poetry tends to contain more true poets than earlier verses of poetry. Renaissance poets tend to increase the importance of traditional Latin in their mother tongue. These poets also tend to focus on the irony and satire 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 which was refined by Renaissance writers. Therefore, they wrote several poems on the importance of order, correctness, and restraint. Their poems focus on the importance of reestablishing the classical 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.
John Donne is a major fanatic of style of poetry, known as metaphysical poetry, which flourished in the late 16th and early 17th centuries. This particular type of poem has well-designed ideas and amazing symbols that are included in the original challenging language structure. The subject of learning depends greatly on the chain of quirky reasoning. His harsh and rare rice; his often quirky metaphor and his oblique reasoning process is a metaphysical feature
The British Renaissance refers to British exploration, experimentation and creation from the 16th century to the early 17th century. Poets, playwrights and prose writers of this era include Shakespeare, Marlow, Johnson, Spencer, Dawn, Bacon, Sydney, Milton. We examine, discuss and analyze the image of the era of representative works including prose and poetry and establish relationships between writers and the cultural background of their work. A thorough study of the British drama in the second half of the 17th century, the drama completely changed the British drama, and its influence is still closely related to us. It includes research on the era itself, the social and political problems of the time and its art, in particular its descendants of the direct descendants of Jacob's plays and the descendants of blue comedy in its historical context. The 18th century