Christopher Marlowe: His Life and WorkHarper & Row, 1965 - 219 pagina's |
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Pagina 34
... 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 quivering nerve of Marlowe's personal response to the theme ...
... 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 quivering nerve of Marlowe's personal response to the theme ...
Pagina 68
... 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 a play in ten acts . This is improbable , and the ...
... 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 a play in ten acts . This is improbable , and the ...
Pagina 114
... death , Watson wrote a Latin elegy , Meliboeus , which he inscribed to Thomas Walsingham . the same year he published his First Set of Italian Madrigals , ' Englished not to the sense of the original ditty , but after the affection of ...
... death , Watson wrote a Latin elegy , Meliboeus , which he inscribed to Thomas Walsingham . the same year he published his First Set of Italian Madrigals , ' Englished not to the sense of the original ditty , but after the affection of ...
Inhoudsopgave
LITERATURE | 31 |
TAMBURLAINE | 50 |
and The Massacre at Paris | 81 |
Copyright | |
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Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
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