Christopher Marlowe: His Life and Work |
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Pagina 34
The living , not the dead , can envy bite , For after death all men receive their right . Then , though death rakes my bones in funeral fire , I'll live and , as he pulls me down , mount higher . One can already feel in this the ...
The living , not the dead , can envy bite , For after death all men receive their right . Then , though death rakes my bones in funeral fire , I'll live and , as he pulls me down , mount higher . One can already feel in this the ...
Pagina 68
In any case there was the story of Tamburlaine's death to be told and the speed with which Marlowe completed a second part indicates that it had been in mind . It does not follow that he had planned from the first an outsize monster of ...
In any case there was the story of Tamburlaine's death to be told and the speed with which Marlowe completed a second part indicates that it had been in mind . It does not follow that he had planned from the first an outsize monster of ...
Pagina 114
In 1590 , on Sir Francis Walsingham's death , Watson wrote a Latin elegy , Meliboeus , which he inscribed to Thomas Walsingham . In the same year he published his First Set of Italian Madrigals , ' Englished not to the sense of the ...
In 1590 , on Sir Francis Walsingham's death , Watson wrote a Latin elegy , Meliboeus , which he inscribed to Thomas Walsingham . In the same year he published his First Set of Italian Madrigals , ' Englished not to the sense of the ...
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able alliteration appeal authorities became better brought called Cambridge Canterbury character Christian Christopher church close comes death died doubt dramatist early Edward effective Elizabethan England English evidence famous Faustus genius give given Greene hand hath Hero imagination intellectual interest kind king later Latin Leander learned less lines lived London looks Lord Marlowe Marlowe's matter mind nature never observed once original passages performed personality phrase play poem poet poetry Queen received reference Richard scene scholar seen sense Shakespeare shows Sonnets soul spirit stage street success Tamburlaine tell theatres thee theme things Thomas thou thought touches translation true turned verse walls Walsingham Watson wits writing written wrote young