The Tragicall History of Christopher Marlowe, Volume 2 |
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Pagina 172
One is indirect and deals with the boastful soldier Scilla 86 in a way that seems reminiscent of two epigrams by Davies . The other allusion is direct : Heywood goes downe saith Dauie , sikerley , And downe he goes , I can it not deny .
One is indirect and deals with the boastful soldier Scilla 86 in a way that seems reminiscent of two epigrams by Davies . The other allusion is direct : Heywood goes downe saith Dauie , sikerley , And downe he goes , I can it not deny .
Pagina 174
these , the rhyme seems more or less accidental . The poet stumbles into a couplet by accident and then , finding it agreeable to the ear , goes on adding rhyme to successive rhyme so long as his ingenuity holds out .
these , the rhyme seems more or less accidental . The poet stumbles into a couplet by accident and then , finding it agreeable to the ear , goes on adding rhyme to successive rhyme so long as his ingenuity holds out .
Pagina 197
This practice seems to have originated with Marlowe and to have been retained throughout the Elizabethan and Jacobean periods . It would doubtless have persisted even after the Restoration had it not been for the rigid refining process ...
This practice seems to have originated with Marlowe and to have been retained throughout the Elizabethan and Jacobean periods . It would doubtless have persisted even after the Restoration had it not been for the rigid refining process ...
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Inhoudsopgave
Edward the Second | 3 |
Dido Queen of Carthage | 41 |
The Massacre at Paris | 69 |
Copyright | |
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allusion Anon appears authorship blank verse borrowed British Brooke called Cambridge Canterbury century character Charles Christopher Marlowe close College Collier Contention copies critics death Dido Diss Doctor Faustus doubt drama dramatists earlier early echoes edition Edward the Second Elizabethan England English English Studies epigrams especially evidence example fact George gives Greene hand haue Henry Hero and Leander Holinshed influence Jahrb John King known later least letter Library lines literature London Lord manuscript Marlowe's Massacre Museum Nashe notes NYPL original Oxford parallels Paris passages play poem poet poetry possible printed probably published quarto Queen references reprint Review revised Richard Robert says scene seems Shakespeare shows similar stage story Studies suggests Tamb Tamburlaine Thomas thou translation True Tragedie University Press verse writing written wrote York