Christopher Marlowe: His Life and WorkHarper & Row, 1965 - 219 pagina's |
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Pagina 140
... Leander : What greater bliss can hap to Gaveston Than live and be the favourite of a king ? Sweet prince , I come ! These , these thy amorous lines Might have enforced me to have swum from France And , like Leander , gasped upon the ...
... Leander : What greater bliss can hap to Gaveston Than live and be the favourite of a king ? Sweet prince , I come ! These , these thy amorous lines Might have enforced me to have swum from France And , like Leander , gasped upon the ...
Pagina 181
... Leander , thou art made for amorous play : Why art thou not in love , and loved of all ? Though thou be fair , yet be not thine own thrall . We recognise the feminine type described by Shakespeare in Sonnet 20 , and the theme of the ...
... Leander , thou art made for amorous play : Why art thou not in love , and loved of all ? Though thou be fair , yet be not thine own thrall . We recognise the feminine type described by Shakespeare in Sonnet 20 , and the theme of the ...
Pagina 189
... Leander made reply ' You are deceived : I am no woman , I. ' There we have Marlowe . It must have given a laugh to the young men of the Southampton circle . Hero and Leander was not published until some five years after Marlowe's death ...
... Leander made reply ' You are deceived : I am no woman , I. ' There we have Marlowe . It must have given a laugh to the young men of the Southampton circle . Hero and Leander was not published until some five years after Marlowe's death ...
Inhoudsopgave
LITERATURE | 31 |
TAMBURLAINE | 50 |
and The Massacre at Paris | 81 |
Copyright | |
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Admiral's men Alleyn appeal Bakeless Barabas blank verse Boas Cambridge Canterbury cathedral character Christian Christopher Marlowe church contemporary Corpus Dido divinity doth doubt dramatic dramatist Earl Edward Edward Alleyn Edward II Elizabethan audience Ellis-Fermor England English evidence exciting famous Faustus foll Gabriel Harvey Gaveston genius Greene Greene's Guise Hariot hath heaven Henry Hero and Leander humour imagination intellectual Jew of Malta king King's School Latin lines lived London Lord lowe's Machiavellian Marlovian Marlowe's Marlowe's plays Massacre at Paris Mephistophilis Nashe nature never Ovid passages patron performed personality phrase plague players poem poet poetry Puritans Queen Ralegh recognise Richard Robert Greene scene scholar Shakespeare Sonnets soul Southampton spirit stage sweet Tamburlaine tell theatres thee theme things Thomas Walsingham thou thought tion touches tragedy translation unto Watson writing wrote young Zenocrate