The Works of Christopher Marlowe: With Notes and Some Account of His Life and Writings, Band 1William Pickering, 1850 - 407 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 38
Seite
... Shakespeare . I have also to return my thanks to Mr. Collier for furnishing me with ball the entries concerning Marlowe's pieces which he had met with while preparing for the press his Extracts from the Registers of the Stationers ...
... Shakespeare . I have also to return my thanks to Mr. Collier for furnishing me with ball the entries concerning Marlowe's pieces which he had met with while preparing for the press his Extracts from the Registers of the Stationers ...
Seite ix
... Shakespeare ( by Boswell ) , iii . 357.- The passage in The Black Book is , - " the spindle - shank spiders stalking over his [ Nash's ] head as if they had been conning of Tamburlaine " ( see Middleton's Works , v . 526 , ed . Dyce ) ...
... Shakespeare ( by Boswell ) , iii . 357.- The passage in The Black Book is , - " the spindle - shank spiders stalking over his [ Nash's ] head as if they had been conning of Tamburlaine " ( see Middleton's Works , v . 526 , ed . Dyce ) ...
Seite xi
... Shakespeare's Henry IV . P. ii . Act ii . sc . 4 , is known to most readers : see also Beaumont and Fletcher's Coxcomb , act ii . sc . 2 ; Fletcher's Women Pleased , act iv . sc . 1 ; Chap- man's , Jonson's , and Marston's Eastward Ho ...
... Shakespeare's Henry IV . P. ii . Act ii . sc . 4 , is known to most readers : see also Beaumont and Fletcher's Coxcomb , act ii . sc . 2 ; Fletcher's Women Pleased , act iv . sc . 1 ; Chap- man's , Jonson's , and Marston's Eastward Ho ...
Seite xxi
... Shakespeare : " I but the latter part is in every respect so inferior , that we rise from a perusal of the whole with a feeling akin to disap- pointment . If the dialogue has little poetry , it has often Pp . 21-74 , 187 , ed . Shake ...
... Shakespeare : " I but the latter part is in every respect so inferior , that we rise from a perusal of the whole with a feeling akin to disap- pointment . If the dialogue has little poetry , it has often Pp . 21-74 , 187 , ed . Shake ...
Seite xxii
... Shakespeare was well ac- quainted with this tragedy cannot be doubted ; but that he caught from it more than a few trifling hints for The Mer- chant of Venice will be allowed by no one who has carefully compared the character of Barabas ...
... Shakespeare was well ac- quainted with this tragedy cannot be doubted ; but that he caught from it more than a few trifling hints for The Mer- chant of Venice will be allowed by no one who has carefully compared the character of Barabas ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
8vo.-Omitted ABIG Abigail ANIPPE apud Dodsley's O. P. arms Bajazeth BARA Barabas bassoes blood brave Callapine CALY Calymath Casane Christians Christopher Marlow Collier Cosroe crown Damascus daughter death Dido doth Dram earth emperor Engl Exeunt Exit father Faustus fear FERN Ferneze FRIAR BARN FRIAR JAC give gold governor hand hast hath haue heart heaven hell Hero and Leander Hist honour ITHA Ithamore Jacomo Jew of Malta Jove king king of Fez King of JERUSALEM KNIGHT live Lodowick looks lord Mahomet majesty Marlowe Marlowe's MATH Mathias mean mighty Nash Natolia Old eds ORCANES passage Persia PILIA Pilia-Borza play Poet printed scene Scythian Shakespeare shew sirrah slave soldiers Soria soul sweet sword TAMB Tamburlaine TECH Techelles thee THER Theridamas thou shalt thousand tragedy Trebizon Turk Turkish unto USUMCASANE villain words ZENO