Marlowe & His PoetryG. G. Harrap, 1914 - 151 Seiten |
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Seite 30
... thought in matters spiritual and temporal was prevalent amongst the educated classes , and therefore particularly so ... thoughts , silence was the only safe way of avoiding the axe , or the brand , or at best lengthy imprisonment ...
... thought in matters spiritual and temporal was prevalent amongst the educated classes , and therefore particularly so ... thoughts , silence was the only safe way of avoiding the axe , or the brand , or at best lengthy imprisonment ...
Seite 32
... thought was natural for the young man that , after having been kept and educated on a scholarship provided for a clerical career , in all honesty he should assume the rôle of a divine ; but further mental examination showed him that ...
... thought was natural for the young man that , after having been kept and educated on a scholarship provided for a clerical career , in all honesty he should assume the rôle of a divine ; but further mental examination showed him that ...
Seite 133
... thought , much less attempted to write , such burning things as Marlowe's fiery mind produced . One more ... thoughts of his known dramas are repeated . There are traces of Marlowe's work in " Titus Andronicus , " and " The Taming of the ...
... thought , much less attempted to write , such burning things as Marlowe's fiery mind produced . One more ... thoughts of his known dramas are repeated . There are traces of Marlowe's work in " Titus Andronicus , " and " The Taming of the ...
Inhalt
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Abschnitt 3 | 13 |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
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