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Show 130 this satiric ject matter that of the The read the For instance, those and constituting these poems similitudes of structure it For signifies. that he is men: classical moral a amazed and things but he the At and chose his same real the simili of with moral sentence the and the Satirist time, he shows other even a more moral wit, context. for It the is Christian-humanist cormnonplace, an example used of a i r t uc deprecatory term sensuality of in J}_ enchantments," temptation 01 And . for the the place a in argu in the phrase "Circe's court" supposed licentiousness is and Rome. Deriding Ascham its pagan literature has v teaching He variety of non-moral once. even explains Odysseus' to at that a states things ing like is strange transformation; a illustration from several is example themes, similitude that amazement infinite an sub erudi example of incontinence. which denote events the displays as the example, compares chosen from could have at find who secondary. as "sign" needing interpretation, what; looking are of Donne's readings libertine manner, a literal which over satires, in play, reading are issue predominant, Those who tudes. tion the disagree. verse themes moral be to seems the "Italianate Scholemaster the speaks Englishman," Roger of Circe's "p l eas ant. licentious vanity which is youth. Imbibing of this sweet the temptation |