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Full Description
Phineas Fletcher's epic allegorical poem The Purple Island (1633) combines anatomical and devotional perspectives on the self as the poet explores the relationship between body and soul. The titular island is figured as both body and as England, thus merging religious, corporeal, devotional, and geo-national narratives. The present critical edition offers the first fresh editorial approach to the poem in over a century and situates the poem in its historical and critical contexts. Although the poem has often been regarded as a bizarre and fragmented curiosity, Johnathan H. Pope compellingly argues in favour of a more unified reading and understanding of the text as a whole, offering a newly-annotated edition that illuminates the text for both the Fletcher specialist and newcomer alike.
Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction 
Dedication and Prefatory Poems 
Canto I 
Canto II 
Canto III 
Canto IIII 
Canto V 
Canto VI 
Canto VII 
Canto VIII 
Canto IX 
Canto X 
Canto XI 
Canto XII 
Francis Quarles, "To my deare friend, the SPENCER of this age" 
Index

              
              
              

