There are a number of works with England's Looking Glass in the title. During the 16th and 17th centuries looking glass, meaning mirror,[1] was frequently used in the titles of books.[2][3]

See also

  • Richard Graham Preston, "Angliae Speculum Morale: The Moral State of England, with the Several Aspects it Beareth to Virtue and Vice" (1670)
  • Simon Patrick, "Angliæ speculum: a glass that flatters not" (1678)

Further reading

"I may truly call these nineteen sins, England's looking-glass, wherein we may see what are the clouds that eclipse God's countenance from shining upon us".

Notes and references

  1. In the same way mirror is now used figuratively in the names of publications like The Daily Mirror
  2. Oxford English Dictionary "Looking-glass" b. fig. (In the 16th and 17th cents. frequently used in the titles of books.) Now rare (= ‘mirror’).
  3. Lily B. Campbell (2005) Shakespeare's Histories: Mirrors of Elizabethan Policy, Routledge, ISBN 0-415-35310-6, ISBN 978-0-415-35310-6. Chapter "poetical mirrors of history" p.107
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