Yale Studies in English, Volume 74 |
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Page 44
... Eubulus , in his song lamenting the fate of Pithias , is accompanied by the Nine Muses . As the Nine Muses have no particular business in Syracuse , and are introduced suddenly into the action , they must have been concealed behind a ...
... Eubulus , in his song lamenting the fate of Pithias , is accompanied by the Nine Muses . As the Nine Muses have no particular business in Syracuse , and are introduced suddenly into the action , they must have been concealed behind a ...
Page 62
... Eubulus , the councilor , whose name is probably taken from the coun- cilor in Gorboduc , is noble and virtuous , but helpless against the will of the tyrant . Aristippus , the courtly philosopher , believes in virtue as long as it does ...
... Eubulus , the councilor , whose name is probably taken from the coun- cilor in Gorboduc , is noble and virtuous , but helpless against the will of the tyrant . Aristippus , the courtly philosopher , believes in virtue as long as it does ...
Page 65
... Eubulus drives him out of the royal palace . His attempt to steal Damon's goods , and consequent beating at the hands of Stephano , is a further link uniting the two plots . Here , then , twenty years before its time , is a piece of ...
... Eubulus drives him out of the royal palace . His attempt to steal Damon's goods , and consequent beating at the hands of Stephano , is a further link uniting the two plots . Here , then , twenty years before its time , is a piece of ...
Page 68
... Eubulus and Dionysius represent , in their speeches , the two opposed methods of statecraft . The conduct of princes and the proper management of kingdoms had been the sub- ject of many works in the Renaissance , the best known being ...
... Eubulus and Dionysius represent , in their speeches , the two opposed methods of statecraft . The conduct of princes and the proper management of kingdoms had been the sub- ject of many works in the Renaissance , the best known being ...
Page 69
... Eubulus , but by the nobility of the two friends in wishing to die for each other . The moral aim of the whole play is pointed out to the audience when Dionysius cries : O noble gentlemen , the immortall Gods aboue Hath made you play ...
... Eubulus , but by the nobility of the two friends in wishing to die for each other . The moral aim of the whole play is pointed out to the audience when Dionysius cries : O noble gentlemen , the immortall Gods aboue Hath made you play ...
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Common terms and phrases
Amantium Iræ Aristippus audience Ben Jonson Brydges Carisophus Chapel Royal Chapter Chaucer Christ Church College comedy contemporaries court court-plays courtier Damon and Pithias daye Dayntie Deuises death deedes Dionysius doth E. K. Chambers eche edited with Introduction Elizabeth Elizabeth's reign Elizabethan Elizabethan Stage Elyot's Emilia English Drama Eubulus F. S. Boas Feuillerat Finis friends Gascoigne Glossary Googe Gorboduc graunt harte hath haue Ibid Jonson ladies Latin Line literary London lorde loue Mary Mary's moral neuer Nicholas Grimald nidden Notes ottava rima Oxford Palamon and Arcite Paradise of Dayntie Ph.D Plautus play plot poems poet poetry popular poulter's couplets praise produced Queen record rhyme royal Richard Edwards saie scene seems sone song speeches stanza thee thou tion Titus A xxiv Tottel's Miscellany tragedy Tudor Age tyme University Drama verse W. Y. Durand William Hunnis wisedome woordes writers WYLL