Critics on MarloweJudith O'Neill University of Miami Press, 1970 - 127 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 21
Seite 12
... poet beeing an Epicure , and an Atheist , made a pitifull end : so our tragicall poet Marlow for his Epicurisme and Atheisme had a tragicall death ; you may read of this Marlow more at large in the Theatre of God's Judgment .... As the ...
... poet beeing an Epicure , and an Atheist , made a pitifull end : so our tragicall poet Marlow for his Epicurisme and Atheisme had a tragicall death ; you may read of this Marlow more at large in the Theatre of God's Judgment .... As the ...
Seite 13
... Poets had , his raptures were All ayre and fire , which made his verses cleere , For that fine madness still he did ... Poet ; this Poem being left unfinished by Marlow , who in some riotous Fray came to an untimely and violent End ...
... Poets had , his raptures were All ayre and fire , which made his verses cleere , For that fine madness still he did ... Poet ; this Poem being left unfinished by Marlow , who in some riotous Fray came to an untimely and violent End ...
Seite 19
... poets who perceived the beauty of words ... as a habit of the poetic mood , and as receiving and reflecting beauty through the feeling of the ideas .... Marlowe , although he was scholar , cared no more for geography and consistent ...
... poets who perceived the beauty of words ... as a habit of the poetic mood , and as receiving and reflecting beauty through the feeling of the ideas .... Marlowe , although he was scholar , cared no more for geography and consistent ...
Inhalt
1965 | 21 |
MODERN CRITICS ON MARLOWE | 28 |
The Second Part of Tamburlaine the Great | 37 |
Urheberrecht | |
8 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
accept action Angel appears attempt Barabas beauty becomes beginning called character Christ Christians clear comes course critics crown death desire despair devil Dr Faustus drama edition Edward Elizabethan English face fact Faustus's fear feeling final follow forces Gaveston give given hand heart Heaven Helen Hell hero Holinshed human idea imagination important interest ironic irony kind King knowledge later leaves less live London look Lord Lucifer magic Malta Marlowe Marlowe's means Mephistophilis mind moral Mortimer murder nature never offers once opening passages passion perhaps pity play pleasure poet presented repent says scene seems sense Shakespeare shows soliloquy soul speech stage suffering suggest sweet Tamburlaine tells thee theme things thou thought tion tragedy tragic turn verse weakness whole writing Zenocrate