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4 - The unquenchable smoking flax: Sarah Wight, Anne Wentworth, and the “rise” of the sovereign individual

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 September 2009

Katharine Gillespie
Affiliation:
Miami University
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Summary

Fool do not boast, Thou canst not touch the freedom of my minde

The Lady in Comus (“Comus appears with his rabble, and the Lady set in an inchanted Chair, to whom he offers his Glass, which she puts by, and goes about to rise” – emphasis added)

one grain of that precious faith, and one dram of love which the Lord gives his hidden ones, is far beyond all other things, that we can act or do; it's all of God, without our mixtures … My soul shouts forth with the true spiritualized Christian, this voice

Sarah Wight, A Wonderful, Pleasant and Profitable Letter

for obeying the Word of the Lord, and his Commandments, I am reproached as a proud, wicked, deceived, deluded, lying Woman; a mad, melancholy, crackbrained, self-willed, conceited Fool, and black sinner, led by whimsies, notions, and knick-knacks of my own head; one that speaks blasphemy, not fit to take the Name of God in her mouth; an Heathen and Publican, a Foretune-teller, an Enthusiast, and the like much more, whereof I appeal to God, to judge: And then let all slanderers challenge their own words.

Anne Wentworth, The Revelation of Jesus Christ

The deification of King Charles and Henrietta Maria at the climax of Carew's masque, Coelum Britannicum, was punctuated by special effects.

Type
Chapter
Information
Domesticity and Dissent in the Seventeenth Century
English Women Writers and the Public Sphere
, pp. 166 - 214
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2004

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