Marlowe & His PoetryG. G. Harrap, 1914 - 151 Seiten |
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Seite 32
... evidently the work of a young man ; and if by Marlowe , which is very doubtful , was apparently not intended for publication . Although spirited and fluent , and even in advance of any previous poetic translation in the language , it ...
... evidently the work of a young man ; and if by Marlowe , which is very doubtful , was apparently not intended for publication . Although spirited and fluent , and even in advance of any previous poetic translation in the language , it ...
Seite 130
... evidently corrupt that it is unsafe and useless to hazard speculations as to its authorship . " The Tragedie of Dido , Queene of Carthage : Played by the children of her Majesties Chappell . · " " Written by Christopher Marlowe and ...
... evidently corrupt that it is unsafe and useless to hazard speculations as to its authorship . " The Tragedie of Dido , Queene of Carthage : Played by the children of her Majesties Chappell . · " " Written by Christopher Marlowe and ...
Seite 131
... evidently had no inconsiderable part . The 1594 edition is probably the first , as there is no likelihood of the work having been pub- lished , or even having been played , during the lifetime of Marlowe . It is evidently an early ...
... evidently had no inconsiderable part . The 1594 edition is probably the first , as there is no likelihood of the work having been pub- lished , or even having been played , during the lifetime of Marlowe . It is evidently an early ...
Inhalt
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Abschnitt 2 | 7 |
Abschnitt 3 | 13 |
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Abigail admiration Alleyn amongst appear Archbishop Parker arms Barabas beauty Ben Jonson blood Calyphas Cambridge Canterbury character Christian Christopher Marlowe clownage contemporary Corpus Christi crown damned death deeds Doctor Faustus drama Edward the Second English entertain divine Zenocrate evidently exclaims fair Zenocrate father favourite fear Gabriel Harvey Gaveston give hand hast hath heaven Hell Hero and Leander hero's honour Jew of Malta Jove King King's School kiss lads learned lines live London looks Lord lovers Lucifer Marlowe's matters ment Meph Mephistophilis mind Mortimer murderer never personages play poem poet poet's poetic poetry princely published Queen replies says scene scholars Scourge Scythian Shakespeare shalt sight soul speech spirits stage stay sweet Tambur Tamburlaine tell thee Thomas Heywood Thomas Walsingham thou thought tion title-page University unto verse Walsingham wealth whilst words wound writer young youth