Richard Brome: A Study of His Life and Works |
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Page 5
... Novella , that perhaps he knew a little German , is even more doubtful than that he knew French . Again , it would be very unsafe to base any conjecture concerning his connection with the profession of law on the know- ledge of legal ...
... Novella , that perhaps he knew a little German , is even more doubtful than that he knew French . Again , it would be very unsafe to base any conjecture concerning his connection with the profession of law on the know- ledge of legal ...
Page 28
... Novella , Prologue . 4 Love - Sick Court , Prologue . 6 Antipodes , Prologue . 8 Court Begger , Prologue and Epilogue . usually guilty of the mortal sin of spiritual pride in 28 Richard Brome : A Study of his Life and Works.
... Novella , Prologue . 4 Love - Sick Court , Prologue . 6 Antipodes , Prologue . 8 Court Begger , Prologue and Epilogue . usually guilty of the mortal sin of spiritual pride in 28 Richard Brome : A Study of his Life and Works.
Page 36
... Novella Lancashire Witches ( Apprentice's Prize ) ( Life and Death of Sir Martin Skink ) Queen and Concubine English Moor Damoiselle · Court Begger Jovial Crew ( Wit in a Madness ) ( Christianetta ) ( Jewish Gentleman ) • Company ...
... Novella Lancashire Witches ( Apprentice's Prize ) ( Life and Death of Sir Martin Skink ) Queen and Concubine English Moor Damoiselle · Court Begger Jovial Crew ( Wit in a Madness ) ( Christianetta ) ( Jewish Gentleman ) • Company ...
Page 41
... Novella . Court Begger . City Wit . Damoiselle . By Richard Brome . London , Printed for Humphrey Moseley , Richard Marriot , and Thomas Dring , and are to be sold at their shops , 1653 . Octavo . Another title - page : London , Printed ...
... Novella . Court Begger . City Wit . Damoiselle . By Richard Brome . London , Printed for Humphrey Moseley , Richard Marriot , and Thomas Dring , and are to be sold at their shops , 1653 . Octavo . Another title - page : London , Printed ...
Page 48
... Novella and the Jovial Crew or the Merry Beggers . The Novella , with its Italian setting , is pure romance , but the English Moor and the Jovial Crew have English settings and a number of humor - characters . Finally , there are three ...
... Novella and the Jovial Crew or the Merry Beggers . The Novella , with its Italian setting , is pure romance , but the English Moor and the Jovial Crew have English settings and a number of humor - characters . Finally , there are three ...
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Common terms and phrases
Academy Alchemist Alexander Brome allusions Antipodes Bartholomew Fair Beeston's Boys Ben Jonson Biog Brome's plays character City Wit comedies of manners contemporaries Couple well Matched Court Begger Covent Garden Weeded cure Cynthia's Revels Damoiselle dedication Dekker drama dramatist English Moor evidence fact Faust Five New Plays Fleay Fletcher Glossary Heywood hint Honest Whore humor imitation influence interest Jonson Jonsonian Jovial Crew King La-Fooles Lancashire Witches Letoy London Lovesick Court Mad Couple main plot Marmion's masque master mentioned Nabbes Northern Lass Northward Ho Notes Novella occurs parallel passage Ph.D Poems Poets prefatory verses Printed Professor Koeppel projectors Prologue Puritans Queen and Concubine Queen's Exchange quoted resemblance Richard Brome romantic Salisbury Court Salisbury Court Theatre satire says scene Schelling servant Shakespeare Shirley Silent Woman situation Sparagus Garden suggestion thee Thomas Timon of Athens title-page underplot Virbius
Popular passages
Page 102 - I'll example you with thievery: The sun's a thief, and with his great attraction Robs the vast sea: the moon's an arrant thief, And her pale fire she snatches from the sun: The sea's a thief, whose liquid surge resolves The moon into salt tears: the earth's a thief, That feeds and breeds by a composture 5 stolen From general excrement: each thing's a thief; The laws, your curb and whip, in their rough power Have uncheck'd theft.
Page 103 - I'll sup. Farewell. POINS. Farewell, my lord. [Exit.] PRINCE. I know you all, and will awhile uphold The unyok'd humour of your idleness: Yet herein will I imitate the sun, Who doth permit the base contagious clouds To smother up his beauty from the world, That when he please again to be himself, Being wanted, he may be more wonder'd at, By breaking through the foul and ugly mists Of vapours that did seem to strangle him.
Page 31 - Pope came off clean with Homer ; but they say Broome went before, and kindly swept the way.
Page 59 - Now in the time of spruceness, our plays follow the niceness of our garments, single plots, quaint conceits, lecherous jests, dressed up in hanging sleeves, and those are fit for the times and the termers: such a kind of light-colour summer stuff, mingled with diverse colours, you shall find this published comedy...
Page 20 - He scoru'd those shifts. You, that have known him, know The common talk ; that from his lips did flow, And run at waste, did savour more of wit, Than any of his time, or since, have writ (But few excepted) in the stage's way : His scenes were acts, and every act a play.
Page 103 - Now is the winter of our discontent Made glorious summer by this sun of York ; And all the clouds that lour'd upon our house In the deep bosom of the ocean buried.
Page 133 - XV. Essays on the Study and Use of Poetry by Plutarch and Basil the Great, translated from the Greek, with an Introduction. FREDERICK M.
Page 133 - IV. Dryden's Dramatic Theory and Practice. MARGARET SHERWOOD, Ph.D. $0.50. V. Studies in Jonson's Comedy. ELISABETH WOODBRIDGE, Ph.D. $0.50. VI. A Glossary of the West Saxon Gospels, Latin-West Saxon and West Saxon-Latin. MATTIE ANSTICE HARRIS, Ph.D. $1.50. VII. Andreas : The Legend of St. Andrew, translated from the Old English, with an Introduction.
Page 40 - London : Printed by JY for ED and NE ; and are to be sold at the Gun in Ivy^Lane. 1652.
Page 136 - XLIII. A Study of Tindale's Genesis, compared with the Genesis of Coverdale and of the Authorized Version. ELIZABETH WHITTLESEY CLEAVELAND, Ph.D. $2.00. XLIV. The Presentation of Time in the Elizabethan Drama. MABLE BULAND, Ph.D. $1.50. XLV. Cynthia's Revels, or the Fountain of Self-Love, by Ben Jonson, edited with Introduction, Notes, and Glossary.