Just a quick note here after reading and re-reading episode 10, and 4/4 of "trying to make sense of the Jonson elegy." The dramatic leap hits home in the split textual thought "speculation for the Elizabethan's," then the insertion of the photo image, and next, the first textual word below the image: Stonehenge. Samuel Daniel's "Musophilus," which I may not have otherwise read, is a revelation in and of itself, but the sudden switch to the pronoun "she," as Credulity is being personified, is kinda' breath-taking. The following brief historical context and connection to King James's court becomes compelling and now I'm filled with burning questions, like a great cliff-hanger. Thanks!
Just a quick note here after reading and re-reading episode 10, and 4/4 of "trying to make sense of the Jonson elegy." The dramatic leap hits home in the split textual thought "speculation for the Elizabethan's," then the insertion of the photo image, and next, the first textual word below the image: Stonehenge. Samuel Daniel's "Musophilus," which I may not have otherwise read, is a revelation in and of itself, but the sudden switch to the pronoun "she," as Credulity is being personified, is kinda' breath-taking. The following brief historical context and connection to King James's court becomes compelling and now I'm filled with burning questions, like a great cliff-hanger. Thanks!
Saving the last two episodes, not unlike a streaming binge. :)