Critics on MarloweJudith O'Neill University of Miami Press, 1970 - 127 Seiten |
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Seite 92
... ironic outcome . But the most trenchant stroke of Marlowe's pervading irony is in the famous last soliloquy . Faustus , too late , begs for time to repent , and in his agony cries out ( 146 ) , ' O lente , lente currite , noctis equi ...
... ironic outcome . But the most trenchant stroke of Marlowe's pervading irony is in the famous last soliloquy . Faustus , too late , begs for time to repent , and in his agony cries out ( 146 ) , ' O lente , lente currite , noctis equi ...
Seite 98
... irony in a passage where the words never suggest it , where the tone is of exultant satisfaction , is to ignore the nature of the poetic statement : here , as elsewhere in the play , Marlowe has put conviction into the voice of Hell ...
... irony in a passage where the words never suggest it , where the tone is of exultant satisfaction , is to ignore the nature of the poetic statement : here , as elsewhere in the play , Marlowe has put conviction into the voice of Hell ...
Seite 113
... irony that I have noted throughout the play - man's nature is in direct opposition to his fate . Faustus is the greatest of Marlowe's aspiring heroes in that his consciousness and his achievements are greater than Tamburlaine's ; he ...
... irony that I have noted throughout the play - man's nature is in direct opposition to his fate . Faustus is the greatest of Marlowe's aspiring heroes in that his consciousness and his achievements are greater than Tamburlaine's ; he ...
Inhalt
1965 | 21 |
MODERN CRITICS ON MARLOWE | 28 |
The Second Part of Tamburlaine the Great | 37 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Abigall action appetite assertion atheism Bad Angel Bajazet Barabas Barabas's beauty blasphemy Calyphas character Christ Christians Christopher Marlowe Cosroe critics crown damn'd damnation death delight desire despair devil divine Doctor Faustus Dr Faustus drama dramatist edition Edward and Gaveston Edward II Elizabethan Ellis-Fermor enemies English episodes farce Faustus's feeling Ferneze final give God's Greg Heaven Helen Hell Hero and Leander hint human idea imagination ironic irony Isabella Ithamore Jew of Malta King King's London Lord Lucifer lust magic Marlovian Marlowe's Marlowe's play Meph Mephistophilis mind moral Mortimer's murder nature never once passages passion pity pleasure poet profession Queen repent Reprinted by permission Richard II says scholars sense Shakespeare shows soliloquy soul speech Spencer spirit stage suffering suggest sweet Tambur Tamburlaine tells thee theme things thou thought tion tragedy tragic Turks turn verse W. W. Greg words writing Zenocrate