Kinney shows how the Mass, the Divine Offices, and the liturgy
underlie the themes and image clusters of Skelton's poems and
argues that liturgical music, especially the plainsong, informs all
of Skelton's meters. What emerges is the portrait of a consistent,
determined, and imaginative poet in whose canon poetics is grounded
in the marriage of teaching and preaching. The study sheds new
light on the interrelationships of politics, poetry, and religion
in Renaissance England.
Originally published in 1987.
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