Herrick, Hollar, and the Tradescants: Piecing together a seventeenth-century triptych

T Moisan - Criticism, 2001 - JSTOR
T Moisan
Criticism, 2001JSTOR
Were there no other affinities, coin a synoptic glance at the figures seventeenth-century
contemporarie Hollar the engraver, and the John T collectors of curiosities for the rich
Tradescant all found, and lost, patro Both Herrick and the elder Tradesc expedition led by
the Duke of Bucki of the Duke's assassination in 1628; H ties in one of his poems (" Upon
Mad pays homage to Thomas Howard, Ea arts and artists and patron, for a whi engravings
of the man from whom house in Lambeth, did the illustratio pared by the younger Tradescant …
Were there no other affinities, coin a synoptic glance at the figures seventeenth-century contemporarie Hollar the engraver, and the John T collectors of curiosities for the rich Tradescant all found, and lost, patro Both Herrick and the elder Tradesc expedition led by the Duke of Bucki of the Duke's assassination in 1628; H ties in one of his poems (" Upon Mad pays homage to Thomas Howard, Ea arts and artists and patron, for a whi engravings of the man from whom house in Lambeth, did the illustratio pared by the younger Tradescant an kinde friend Mr Hollar" by the youn the catalogue (" To the Ingenuous RE half of Tradescant's widow when sh claim to the Tradescants' collection. these vitae reveal, and reflecting th productions of each of these figures success negotiate the passage betwee age, and coterie and public commodi productions represent and how they Nor, though, are the affinities disc Tradescants confinable merely to an to follow—and with due acknowledg
JSTOR