VOLUME 12.1-2 (1993)
Contents
Maria J. Pando Canteli. "One like none, and lik'd of
none": John Donne and the Grotesque Representation of the Female
Body. 1-16.
Elaine Perez Zickler. "nor in nothing, nor in things": The
case of love and desire in John Donne's
Songs and Sonets.
17-40.
L.E. Semler. John Donne and the Early Maniera. 41-66.
Ann Hurley. Donne's "Good Friday, Riding Westward, 1613"
and the
Illustrated Meditative Tradition. 67-78.
Joan Faust. John Donne's Verse Letters to the Countess of
Bedford: Mediators in a Poet-Patroness Relationship. 79-100.
A.E.B. Coldiron. "Poets be silent": Self-Silencing
Conventions and Rhetorical Context in the 1633 Critical Elegies on
Donne. 101-114.
Deborah Aldrich Larson. Donne's Contemporary Reputation:
Evidence from Some Commonplace Books and Manuscript Miscellanies.
115- 130.
Robert G. Collmer. Elizabeth Drury in the United States.
131-138.
J.T. Rhodes. Continuities: The Ongoing English Catholic
Tradition from the 1570s to the 1630s. 139-152.
Tiree MacGregor and C.Q. Drummond. The Authorship of "Fair
Friend, 'tis true, your beauties move." 153-168.
Joe Snader.
The Compleat Angler and the Problems
of Scientific Methodology. 169-189.