The Tragicall History of Christopher Marlowe, Volume 2Archon Books, 1964 - 432 pagina's |
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Pagina 167
... Latin is of this kind . Some are free render- ings to meet the exigencies of verse . Others are probably cor- rect translations of faults in the sixteenth - century Latin texts from which Marlowe was working . The text of Ovid , which ...
... Latin is of this kind . Some are free render- ings to meet the exigencies of verse . Others are probably cor- rect translations of faults in the sixteenth - century Latin texts from which Marlowe was working . The text of Ovid , which ...
Pagina 168
... Latin texts of Ovid read . . sentique abeuntis amorem ... - " feel the love of one departing . " 74 Even so , Marlowe's translation is very free , though well enough in view of the license required in verse translation . But modern ...
... Latin texts of Ovid read . . sentique abeuntis amorem ... - " feel the love of one departing . " 74 Even so , Marlowe's translation is very free , though well enough in view of the license required in verse translation . But modern ...
Pagina 173
... Latin poetry never attempted rhyme until their great periods were over . Rhyme does not develop in Latin until the Silver Age , and Greek poets never employed it to any great extent until relatively modern times . Early French poetry ...
... Latin poetry never attempted rhyme until their great periods were over . Rhyme does not develop in Latin until the Silver Age , and Greek poets never employed it to any great extent until relatively modern times . Early French poetry ...
Inhoudsopgave
Edward the Second | 3 |
Dido Queen of Carthage | 41 |
The Massacre at Paris | 69 |
Copyright | |
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Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
allusion appears authorship blank verse borrowed Brooke called Cambridge century character Charles Christopher Marlowe close Collier Contention copies critics death Dido Doctor Faustus doubt drama dramatist earlier early echoes edition Edward the Second Elizabethan England English epigrams especially evidence examples fact further George gives Greene hand haue Henry Hero and Leander Holinshed imitation influence Jahrb John King known later Latin least Library lines literature London Lord loue lowe manuscript Marlowe Marlowe's Massacre Nashe never notes original parallels Paris passages perhaps play poem poet poetry possible Press printed probably published quarto Queen quotes references reprint Review revised rhyme Richard Robert says scene seems Shakespeare Shepherd shows similar stage story Studies suggests Tamb Tamburlaine Thomas thou translation True Tragedie University usually verse writing written wrote York