The Tragicall History of Christopher Marlowe, Volume 2 |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-3 van 42
Pagina 60
Perhaps Marlowe was thinking of Aristotle's observation in the Poetics that Epic has a special advantage which enables the length to be increased , because in tragedy it is not possible to represent several parts of the story as going ...
Perhaps Marlowe was thinking of Aristotle's observation in the Poetics that Epic has a special advantage which enables the length to be increased , because in tragedy it is not possible to represent several parts of the story as going ...
Pagina 104
Musaeus tells the whole story in 343 lines , " ? whereas Marlowe's share of the English poem , that is , the first two sestiads , leaves the story unfinished after 818 lines . Marlowe expands and elaborates the older story at every ...
Musaeus tells the whole story in 343 lines , " ? whereas Marlowe's share of the English poem , that is , the first two sestiads , leaves the story unfinished after 818 lines . Marlowe expands and elaborates the older story at every ...
Pagina 143
In Germany , Schiller had told the story , and Goethe had meditated a poem on it , but in England the poem did not come into its own again until the nineteenth century . Even as late as the end of the eighteenth century ...
In Germany , Schiller had told the story , and Goethe had meditated a poem on it , but in England the poem did not come into its own again until the nineteenth century . Even as late as the end of the eighteenth century ...
Wat mensen zeggen - Een review schrijven
We hebben geen reviews gevonden op de gebruikelijke plaatsen.
Inhoudsopgave
Dido Queen of Carthage | 41 |
The Massacre at Paris | 69 |
Hero and Leander | 99 |
Copyright | |
4 andere gedeelten niet getoond
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
allusion Anon appears authorship blank verse borrowed Brooke called Cambridge Canterbury century Charles Christopher Marlowe close College Collier contains 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 Nashe notes NYPL original Oxford parallels Paris passages perhaps 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 usually verse writing written wrote York