English, asked by simi7769, 6 months ago

*Substantiate Elizabethan age as"the nest of singing birds"​

Answers

Answered by samarthpawar48
2

Answer:

Musical development was part of the intellectual and social movement that influenced all England during the Tudor Age. The same forces that produced writers like Sir Philip Sidney, Edmund Spenser, William Shakespeare, Ben Jonson, John Donne, and Francis Bacon also produced musicians of corresponding caliber. So numerous and prolific were these talented and imaginative men—men whose reputations were even in their own day firmly established and well founded—that they have been frequently and aptly referred to as a nest of singing birds.

Explanation:

Ans. Elizabethan age was rich in poetry, though its dramatic literature was richer. Shakespeare was not only the greatest dramatist but also the greatest poet of the Elizabethan age. The Elizabethan period, particularly the period from 1580 to 1603, is the golden age of the Renaissance. The period from 1550 to 1580 is the formative and imitative period of Elizabethan poetry. Tottel’s Miscellany is a landmark of lyrical poems, “Songs and Sonnets” was published. It is popularly known as Tottel’s Miscellany after the name of the printer. It Showed a new note of lyricism. There was the urge for expressing personal feelings in innumerable songs and sonnets. Elizabethan Lyrics and Sonnets

Answered by Anonymous
8

Answer:

Elizabethan Age is termed as the nest of singing birds as the songs, lyrics and sonnets were produced in poetry of numbers. It was the flowering of poetry. Poetry enjoyed its heyday during the Elizabethan Age. The Whole Age lived in a state of poetic fervor.

Explanation:

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