The Tragicall History of Christopher Marlowe, Volume 2Archon Books, 1964 - 432 pagina's |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-3 van 62
Pagina 117
... dramatist's certainty that his audience would recognize Marlowe's lines is evidence of their popularity . Jonson had reverence enough for Marlowe's memory to condemn Matthew's plagiarism : A filching rogue , hang him ! —and from the ...
... dramatist's certainty that his audience would recognize Marlowe's lines is evidence of their popularity . Jonson had reverence enough for Marlowe's memory to condemn Matthew's plagiarism : A filching rogue , hang him ! —and from the ...
Pagina 155
... dramatist habitually used anything he could lay his hands on . Internal evidence gives no help either way . Each poet was quite capable of writing the lyric ; but the Shakespearean argu- ments are on the whole rather weak . Given the ...
... dramatist habitually used anything he could lay his hands on . Internal evidence gives no help either way . Each poet was quite capable of writing the lyric ; but the Shakespearean argu- ments are on the whole rather weak . Given the ...
Pagina 231
... dramatist wrote incorrect historical references in The True Tragedie and that these by some miracle fitted correctly into The Massacre at Paris . Assume , however , that the same dramatist wrote all four , that he had the allusions ...
... dramatist wrote incorrect historical references in The True Tragedie and that these by some miracle fitted correctly into The Massacre at Paris . Assume , however , that the same dramatist wrote all four , that he had the allusions ...
Inhoudsopgave
Edward the Second | 3 |
Dido Queen of Carthage | 41 |
The Massacre at Paris | 69 |
Copyright | |
6 andere gedeelten niet getoond
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
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