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Puttenham and time
Around the same time, in his Hypercritica ( not published until 1722 ), Edmund Bolton writes of " the elegant, witty, and artificial book of the Art of English Poetrie, ( the work as the fame is ) of one of Elizabeth's Gentleman Pensioners, Puttenham ".
Richard Puttenham is known to have spent much of his time abroad, whereas George is only known to have left England a single time, to get the deed for Sherfield House from his brother.

Puttenham and Elizabeth
In late 1559 or early 1560 Puttenham married Elizabeth, Lady Windsor ( 1520 – 1588 ), the daughter and coheir of Peter Cowdray of Herriard, Hampshire.

Puttenham and England
* Puttenham, Hertfordshire, England, United Kingdom
* Puttenham, Surrey, England, United Kingdom

Puttenham and from
He immediately quarreled at Sherfield House with Lady Windsor's brother-in-law, Thomas Paulet, for inciting others to steal a goshawk from him ; Paulet admitting to having confronted Puttenham with a dagger and wounding him twice.
Since George Puttenham received two leases in reversion from the queen in 1588, this seems to clearly identify him as the author.
In George Puttenham ’ s The Arte of English Poesie ( 1589 ) aporia isthe Doubtful, called ... because oftentimes we will seem to caste perils, and make doubts of things when by a plaine manner of speech we might affirm or deny .” In another reference from 1657, J. Smith ’ s Mystical Rhetoric, the term becomes “ a figure whereby the speaker sheweth that he doubteth, either where to begin for the multitude of matters, or what to do or say in some strange or ambiguous thing ” ( OED ).
The manor passed by marriage from the Warblingtons to the Puttenham family.

Puttenham and English
The following year The Arte of English Poesie, attributed to George Puttenham, placed Oxford among a " crew " of courtier poets ; he also considered Oxford among the best comic playwrights of the day.
( 2 ) The Arte of English Poesie ( 1589 ), attributed to George Puttenham, includes Oxford on a list of courtier poets and prints some of his verses as exemplars of " his excellencie and wit.
George Puttenham, calls it a satire in his Arte of English Poesie, noting its obscure language unapprovingly.
George Puttenham, in the Arte of English Poesie speaks of " Maister Edward Dyar, for Elegie most sweete, solemne, and of high conceit.
George Puttenham ( 1529 – 1590 ) was a 16th-century English writer, literary critic, and notorious rake.
According to George Puttenham, presumptive author of The Arte of English Poesie, Sir Thomas Wyatt and Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey, " trauailed into Italie " ( 49 ) and brought back the verse forms that make them " the first reformers of our English meter and stile " ( 49 ).
The reputed 1589 author of The Arte of English Poesie, George Puttenham, grew up at Sherfield Court but, as an adult, disputed its ownership with his niece.
* George Puttenham ( 1529-1590 ), English literary critic

Puttenham and ),
In an essay published in the second edition of William Camden's Remaines ( 1614 ), Richard Carew writes, "… look into our Imitations of all sorts of verses by any other language, and you shall finde that Sir Phillip Sidney, Maister Puttenham, Maister Stanihurst, and divers more have made use how farre wee are within compasse of a fore imagined impossibility in that behalfe ".
This latter, termed " band " ( 65 ) and " enterlacement " ( 70 ), is of primary concern to Puttenham.

Puttenham and is
George Puttenham is said to have been implicated in a plot against Lord Burghley in 1570 and in December 1578 was imprisoned.
" Although Harrington does not name Puttenham, in a surviving manuscript note concerning the publication of his own book, he asks Field to publish it " in the same print that Putnams book is ", which he did.
There is no direct evidence beyond Bolton's ascription to identify the author with George or Richard Puttenham, the sons of Robert Puttenham and his wife Margaret, the sister of Sir Thomas Elyot, who dedicated his treatise on the Education or Bringing up of Children to her for the benefit of her sons.
The Hog's Back Cafe is in a layby on the Guildford to Farnham ( westbound ) carriageway of the A31 along the Hog's Back, between the turn offs to Puttenham and Seale.

Puttenham and only
Alan Nelson, de Vere's only biographer who does not advocate the Oxfordian Theory, writes that " ontemporary observers such as Harvey, Webbe, Puttenham and Meres clearly exaggerated Oxford's talent in deference to his rank.

Puttenham and .
Contemporary critics such as Webbe and Puttenham praised his poetic ability, and his verses were published in several poetry miscellanies.
In another passage 23 chapters later, the author ( probably George Puttenham ) speaks of aristocratic writers who, if their writings were made public, would appear to be excellent.
Several other contemporary authors refer to Oxford as an openly acknowledged poet, and Puttenham himself quotes one of Oxford's verses elsewhere in the book, referring to him by name as the author.
* George Puttenham.
** George Puttenham, critic ( d. 1590 )
These include Friedrich Schiller, George Puttenham, William Empson, Frank Kermode, Raymond Williams, Renato Poggioli, Annabel Patterson, Paul Alpers, and Ken Hiltner.
George Puttenham was one of the first Pastoral theorists.
His next argument focuses on the artificiality of poetry, drawing upon fellow theorist, Puttenham.
** George Puttenham ( attr.
* George Puttenham ( attr.
He was Rector of Puttenham, Hampshire, and later Dean of Windsor.
In his social-climbing manual, Elizabethan George Puttenham recommends that would-be courtiers have " sickness in his sleeve, thereby to shake off other importunities of greater consequence " and suggests feigning a " dry dropsy [...] of some such other secret disease, as the common conversant can hardly discover, and the physician either not speedily heal, or not honestly bewray.
George was the second son of Robert Puttenham of Sherfield-on-Loddon in Hampshire and his wife Margaret, the daughter of Sir Richard Elyot and sister of Sir Thomas Elyot.
These documents paint a decidedly troubled picture of George Puttenham as a compulsive adulterer, a serial rapist and a wife-beater.
One of the more lascivious stories asserts that when Puttenham was forty-three, he also had his servant kidnap a 17-year-old girl in London and bring her to his farm at Upton Grey near Sherfield, where he raped her and kept her locked up for three years.

time and Elizabeth
They pointed out that astrologers have only a small knowledge of astronomy and that they often do not take into account basic features such as the precession of the equinoxes which would change the position of the sun with time ; they commented on the example of Elizabeth Teissier who claimed that " the sun ends up in the same place in the sky on the same date each year " as the basis for claims that two people with the same birthday but a number of years apart should be under the same planetary influence.
Fermanagh was made into a county by statute of Elizabeth I, but it was not until the time of the Plantation of Ulster that it was finally brought under civil government.
Their time at the school was cut short when Elizabeth Branwell, their aunt who joined the family to look after the children after the death of their mother, died of internal obstruction in October 1842.
Before entering West Point, Poe moved back to Baltimore for a time, to stay with his widowed aunt Maria Clemm, her daughter, Virginia Eliza Clemm ( Poe's first cousin ), his brother Henry, and his invalid grandmother Elizabeth Cairnes Poe.
Elizabeth was encouraged to take an interest in local politics and, contrary to practices at the time, was allowed the freedom to explore the town with its nearby salt-marshes, beach and the small port of Slaughden with its boatbuilders ' yards and sailmakers ' lofts.
Around this time, Elizabeth also entered into discussion with male medical views regarding women.
By the time William Grindal became her tutor in 1544, Elizabeth could write English, Latin, and Italian.
Elizabeth was fortunate that many bishoprics were vacant at the time, including the Archbishopric of Canterbury.
Elizabeth seriously considered marrying Dudley for some time.
Elizabeth seems to have taken the courtship seriously for a time, and wore a frog-shaped earring that Anjou had sent her.
At first, only Elizabeth made a virtue of her virginity: in 1559, she told the Commons, " And, in the end, this shall be for me sufficient, that a marble stone shall declare that a queen, having reigned such a time, lived and died a virgin ".
During this time, repression of Catholics intensified, and Elizabeth authorised commissions in 1591 to interrogate and monitor Catholic householders.
Elizabeth, during the last years of her reign, came to rely on granting monopolies as a cost-free system of patronage rather than ask Parliament for more subsidies in a time of war.
Elizabeth characteristically delayed in acting on the matter and he was detained under house arrest for a short time.
Queen Elizabeth II, one of the world's best-known and List of longest reigning monarchs of all time | longest-serving heads of state
The last time a British monarch unilaterally selected the British prime minister was in 1963, when Queen Elizabeth II appointed Alec Douglas-Home on the advice of outgoing prime minister Harold Macmillan.
By a Charter of Elizabeth I in 1589 the bailiff was replaced by a mayor, by which time the town's importance was dwindling.
Elizabeth visited in 1566 and 1568, by which time Leicester had commissioned the royal architect Henry Hawthorne to produce plans for a dramatic, classical extension of the south side of the inner court.
At the same time, Elizabeth forms an acquaintance with Mr Wickham, a militia officer who claims to have been very seriously mistreated by Mr Darcy, despite having been a ward of Mr Darcy's father.
He suffered from polio as a child, and found generally effective treatment with the Kenny Method ( created by Elizabeth Kenny ) which the American Medical Association repudiated at that time.
Around that time, Robert Stillington, the bishop of Bath and Wells, informed Richard that Edward IV's marriage to Elizabeth Woodville had been invalid due to an earlier union by the King with Eleanor Butler, making Edward V and his siblings illegitimate.
Around this time Ryan also runs afoul of Elizabeth Elliott, international affairs advisor to then presidential candidate Governor of Ohio J. Robert Fowler, and a former professor of Cathy Ryan's.
Elizabeth spent her time between different prisons, including the Tower of London.

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