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Description based upon print version of record
Book Cover; Half-Title; Title; Copyright; General Editor's Preface; Contents; Preface; Note; Abbreviations; Introduction; 1. John Weever, Marston and Jonson; 2. Ben Jonson, Every Man out of his Humour; 3. Ben Jonson, prologue to Cynthia's Revels; 4. John Weever, Jonson as humorist; 5. Nicholas Breton on the satirical fashion; 6. Ben Jonson, Poetaster; 7. Thomas Dekker, Horace untrussed; 8. Charles Fitzgeffrey on Jonson; 9. Cambridge views on the War of the Theatres; 10. Henry Chettle, Jonson's steel pen; 11. Samuel Daniel attacks the learned masque; 12. Thomas Dekker on Jonson's pedantry
13. John Marston, tribute to Jonson14. Sir Edward Herbert on Jonson's Horace; 15. Jonson as laureate; 16. On Sejanus; 17. John Marston glances at Sejanus; 18. Ben Jonson on his masques; 19. On Volpone; 20. Ben Jonson, more principles for the masque; 21. Jonson's comedy malicious and factious; 22. Ben Jonson, prologue to The Alchemist; 23. On Catiline; 24. John Selden on Jonson's scholarship; 25. Ben Jonson, Bartholomew Fair; 26. On Jonson's epigrams; 27. William Fennor on the reception of Sejanus; 28. Robert Anton, Jonson among the melancholic creators; 29. From The Workes of Benjamin Jonson
30. William Drummond, Jonson's character31. Inigo Jones, attack on Jonson; 32. Edmund Bolton on Jonson's language; 33. George Chapman, expostulation with Jonson; 34. Ben Jonson on The Staple of News; 35. Nicholas Oldisworth on Jonson; 36. Controversy over The New Inn; 37. Falkland on Jonson as the dispenser of fame; 38. Leonard Digges, Shakespeare's plays more popular than Jonson's; 39. Thomas Randolph on the power of Jonson's verses; 40. Ben Jonson, The Magnetic Lay; 41. Alexander Gill, attack on The Magnetic Lady; 42. James Howell, letters to Jonson
43. Sir John Suckling, caricature of Jonson44. Ben Jonson, prologue to The Sad Shepherd; 45. Sir John Suckling, Jonson's arrogance; 46. James Shirley on Jonson and The Alchemist; 47. Newcastle, tribute to Jonson; 48. George Stutvile, Jonson as tutor; 49. Tributes from Jonsonus Virbius; 50. George Daniel, elegy on Jonson; 51. John Benson, dedication of Jonson's Poems; 52. On Jonson's translation of Horace's Ars Poetica; 53. James Shirley on Shakespeare, Fletcher, and Jonson; 54. William Cartwright on Jonson's love-scenes; 55. Robert Herrick, tributes to Jonson
56. Edmund Gayton, Jonson the scholar's playwright57. On reviving Jonson at the Restoration; 58. Samuel Pepys on performances of Epicoene and Bartholomew Fair; 59. The Play of the Puritan; 60. Margaret Cavendish on Jonson's plays; 61. Thomas Fuller, portrait of Jonson; 62. Richard Flecknoe, Jonson's part in the history of the English stage; 63. Samuel Pepys on performances of Epicoene and Bartholomew Fair; 64. Saint-Evremond, Jonson central to a French view of English comedy; 65. Samuel Butler on Jonson and Shakespeare; 66. Samuel Pepys reads Every Man in his Humour, sees Epicoene
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