And Morning in His Eyes: A Book about Christopher MarloweBoriswood, 1937 - 352 Seiten |
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Seite 156
... poetry , but Ralegh was far too much taken up with winning his own way back to favour to bother much about Spenser ... poetry . poetry . But when he heard that Elizabeth was to be rowed down the Thames past the Tower , he asked his ...
... poetry , but Ralegh was far too much taken up with winning his own way back to favour to bother much about Spenser ... poetry . poetry . But when he heard that Elizabeth was to be rowed down the Thames past the Tower , he asked his ...
Seite 178
A Book about Christopher Marlowe Philip Henderson. of poetry reaped by the dead poet , the famous Gracer of Tragedians , Shakespeare reflects : I shall think it a most plenteous crop To glean the broken ears after the man That the main ...
A Book about Christopher Marlowe Philip Henderson. of poetry reaped by the dead poet , the famous Gracer of Tragedians , Shakespeare reflects : I shall think it a most plenteous crop To glean the broken ears after the man That the main ...
Seite 333
... poets . As is well known , its two sestiads owe their origin to that fragment composed in the age of Justinian by Musaeus , a piece that is often described as the last rose in the fading garden of Greek poetry . The same Musaeus is ...
... poets . As is well known , its two sestiads owe their origin to that fragment composed in the age of Justinian by Musaeus , a piece that is often described as the last rose in the fading garden of Greek poetry . The same Musaeus is ...
Inhalt
List of Illustrations | 9 |
THE MAN AND HIS WORLD | 17 |
Cambridge | 32 |
Urheberrecht | |
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ambassadors appears atheism audience Baines Barabas beauty bethan blood Brayne bull Burbage Canterbury Catholic chamber Chomley Christian Christopher Marlowe Church Court cries crown dagger Deptford devil divine dramatists Earl Edward Alleyn Edward II Elizabeth Elizabethan drama England English evidence Faustus fear friends Friser Gaveston Greene Greene's hand Harriot hath heaven hell Henry Henry VI Henslowe Henslowe's Hero and Leander honour intellectual Jew of Malta Joan John king later live London Lord Lordship Machiavellian Marlovian Mephistophilis mind murder Nashe never night passion Philip Henslowe play players plot poem poet poetry Poley prison Privy Council Puritans Queen Ralegh religion replied Richard Richard Burbage Richard III says scene scholar seems sent Shakespeare Sir Walter Ralegh Skeres soul Spanish Tragedy Spenser stage Tamburlaine tavern tells Theatre thee things Thomas thou Timur told Tragedy unto verse Walsingham Watson wife writing wrote