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Works
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Samuel Daniel : Selected Poetry and a Defense of Rhyme
by Samuel Daniel, Geoffrey G. Hiller, Peter L. Groves
Paperback
Pegasus Press, August 1998
"This first fully annotated edition of the Renaissance poet and
theorist’s major work reveals a mind intensely engaged with
different—even opposing—perspectives on philosophical and
literary problems....The introduction outlines Daniel’s career
and offers full and lucid discussion on the development of his
ideas of poetry, his imaginative sympathy, his status as an
intellectual of the time, and his contribution to the contemporary
debate on metrics. Copious footnotes aid in making Daniel’s
syntax accessible. An appendix contains different versions of
several Delia sonnets, in original spelling, allowing study of his
craftsmanship and his revision process." The Publisher
The publisher's page for the book
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Collection of the Historie of England
by Samuel Daniel
Hardcover
Scholars Facsimilies & Reprint; June 1986
Hymen's Triumph
(Malone Society Reprints 155)
by Samuel Daniel, John Pitcher (Editor)
Hardcover
Oxford University Press, February 1995
"An edition of Samuel Daniel's masque, Hymen's Triumph,
performed in 1614, based on the presentation manuscript
now in Edinburgh University Library."OUP
Order it from Amazon.co.uk
Three Renaissance Pastorals: Aminta, Pastor Fido, Queene's Arcadia
(Medieval & Renaissance Text & Studies, Vol 102)
by Samuel Daniel, Torquato Tasso, Battista Guarini;
Elizabeth Story Donno (Editor)
Hardcover
Medieval & Renaissance Texts & Studies, May 1993
Order it from Amazon.co.uk
Miscellaneous
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Architectonics of Imitation in Spenser, Daniel and Drayton
by David Galbraith
Hardcover
Univ of Toronto Pr; October 2000
"This study explores the treatment of the boundaries
between poetry and history in three epic literary works:
Spenser's Faerie Queene, Samuel Daniel's Civil Wars,
and Michael Drayton's Poly-Olbion. David Galbraith
argues that each of the three national poems enters
into a dialogue with classical and more contemporary
predecessors and that this relationship has profound
implications for understanding the English Renaissance."
The Publisher.
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Samuel Daniel, A Critical Study
by George Keyports Brady
Library Binding
Reprint Services Corp, January 1926
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