World Literature
- 421
- Essay on The Garden of Cyrus
- "The Problem of Memoria and Virtuoso Sensibility in Sir Thomas Browne's The Garden of Cyrus," by Arno Löffler (Erlangen).
- 422
- Gailileo Project: Thomas Browne
- Biographical information on Browne. Compiled by Richard S. Westfall of Indiana University.
- 423
- Religio Medici
- Images of artwork and text from a 1642 edition of Religio Medici. From Glasgow University Library Special Collections.
- 424
- Sir Thomas Browne
- Texts of several of Browne's works. Maintained by James Eason of the University of Chicago.
- 425
- Sir Thomas Browne
- Discussion of Browne from The Cambridge History of English and American Literature: An Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes (1907-21).
- 428
- Book Review
- Marie-Louise Coolahan reviews Elizabeth Cary Lady Falkland: Life and Letters, by Heather Wolfe.
- 429
- Elizabeth Cary's Mariam and the Critique of Pure Reason
- William M. Hamlin argues that "her play interrogates the facile distinction between reason and feeling that several of its characters, and especially the Chorus, routinely assume, and which contributes significantly to the protagonist's death."
- 430
- Renaissance Drama: The Tragedy of Mariam
- Compares Cary's play to its source, Josephus's Antiquities of the Jews.
- 431
- Review of The Tragedy of Mariam
- Critical evaluation of Stephanie J. Wright's edition of Cary's play. Written by Carrie Hintz; published in Early Modern Literary Studies 3:2 (September 1997).
- 432
- Book Review
- Carrie Hintz reviews Margaret Cavendish and the Exiles of the Mind, by Anna Battigelli.
- 433
- Book Reviews
- Bernadette Andrea reviews Sociable Letters and The Convent of Pleasure, Ed. James Fitzmaurice; The Convent of Pleasure and Other Plays, Ed. Anne Shaver.
- 438
- Romancing Multiplicity: Female Subjectivity and the Body Divisible in Margaret Cavendish's Blazing World
- Geraldine Wagner argues that Cavendish "considered textuality a means to subjectivity: one in which there is . . . no sovereign head, but many multi-bodied, competing loci of potential agency."
