Tom Lockwood
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Poetry, patronage and cultural agency
The career of William Lewis
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This chapter shows the ways in which poetry made a good deal happen in the career of one chaplain, William Lewis. It explores the different ways in which he used manuscript verse to construct a place for himself within the major institutions of early modern culture, and across the range of their temporal and spiritual activities. Even without the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, it would be perfectly possible to write a biography of Lewis and so to investigate his agency in culture. Thomas Washington's death raised questions of poetry for William Lewis. The presence of Lewis is not documented among the fluid and rapidly changing members of Charles's and Buckingham's entourage, but the poem clearly places him at any rate on its edges. Lewis's elegies are an expression of agency in a world of institutions and advancement, committed to individual opportunity, of course, but perhaps more powerfully to community.

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Chaplains in early modern England

Patronage, literature and religion

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