1. Marlowe, theatrical speech, and the epicenter of sonnetdom : the Elegies -- 2. Tamburlaine and "the argument / Of every Epigram or Eligie" -- 3. Parts that no eye should behold : Dido and the desultor -- 4. "It is no pain to speak men fair" : the...
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Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin - Preußischer Kulturbesitz, Haus Unter den Linden
Inter-library loan:
Unlimited inter-library loan, copies and loan
1. Marlowe, theatrical speech, and the epicenter of sonnetdom : the Elegies -- 2. Tamburlaine and "the argument / Of every Epigram or Eligie" -- 3. Parts that no eye should behold : Dido and the desultor -- 4. "It is no pain to speak men fair" : the desultor in Edward II -- 5. The massacre at Paris : the desultor as playwright -- 6. "Loue alwaies makes those eloquent that haue it" : Ovid in Hero and Leander -- 7. Lente, lente : Doctor Faustus and the Elegies -- 8. Ovid in The Jew of Malta.
1. Marlowe, theatrical speech, and the epicenter of sonnetdom : the Elegies -- 2. Tamburlaine and "the argument / Of every Epigram or Eligie" -- 3. Parts that no eye should behold : Dido and the desultor -- 4. "It is no pain to speak men fair" : the...
more
Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin - Preußischer Kulturbesitz, Haus Potsdamer Straße
Inter-library loan:
No inter-library loan
1. Marlowe, theatrical speech, and the epicenter of sonnetdom : the Elegies -- 2. Tamburlaine and "the argument / Of every Epigram or Eligie" -- 3. Parts that no eye should behold : Dido and the desultor -- 4. "It is no pain to speak men fair" : the desultor in Edward II -- 5. The massacre at Paris : the desultor as playwright -- 6. "Loue alwaies makes those eloquent that haue it" : Ovid in Hero and Leander -- 7. Lente, lente : Doctor Faustus and the Elegies -- 8. Ovid in The Jew of Malta.