Henry VIII. Surrey embodied the contradictions of the courtier's role, through his standing both as a representative of the older nobility and heir to the greatest title outside the royal family, and as a
poet who wrote innovative texts and created the most enduring poetic forms in England, the English sonnet and blank verse.More and more, critics and scholars have called for a more contemporary and wider assessment of his role in Tudor society. Sessions uses Surrey's redefinition of the role of Tudor courtier through his poems, his unique portraits, his military campaigns, and his political presence, to reveal how he created the first image in England of the Renaissance
courtier. Surrey is also shown to embody the rather more modern image of the poet who writes and invents in the midst of radical violence.
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