Apology for the Middle Class: The Dramatic Novels of Thomas DeloneyIndiana University Press, 1960 - 165 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 24
... laughter . What ayles the foole to laugh , sayd the King ? Marrie ( quoth Will Sommers ) to see these maidens get their liuing , as buls doe eate their meate . How is that , said the Queen ? By going still backward quoth Will Sommers ...
... laughter . What ayles the foole to laugh , sayd the King ? Marrie ( quoth Will Sommers ) to see these maidens get their liuing , as buls doe eate their meate . How is that , said the Queen ? By going still backward quoth Will Sommers ...
Page 36
... laugh , the impli- cations of the action are usually ignored . Cruel or tragic events , because of their improbability in real life , provoke laughter if they are told in an incongruously simple and direct manner . Their very absurdity ...
... laugh , the impli- cations of the action are usually ignored . Cruel or tragic events , because of their improbability in real life , provoke laughter if they are told in an incongruously simple and direct manner . Their very absurdity ...
Page 97
... laugh- ing at him , and asks why he wears glasses . His reply con- tains the same mixture of comedy and pathos that we see in the handling of Randoll Pert : True Mistris , said he , as little need hath an old man of a yong wife : but ...
... laugh- ing at him , and asks why he wears glasses . His reply con- tains the same mixture of comedy and pathos that we see in the handling of Randoll Pert : True Mistris , said he , as little need hath an old man of a yong wife : but ...
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Apology for the Middle Class: The Dramatic Novels of Thomas Deloney Merritt E. Lawlis No preview available - 1960 |
Common terms and phrases
action apprentice asks ballads becomes Benedick Cardiff Castle CHAPTER characters cloth clothiers Cole's Crispianus Crispine Deloney's Deloney's novels dialogue Duke Robert E. M. Forster Elizabethan England English Novel entertainment euphuistic French hood Gentle Craft Gillian gives goes Gray of Gloucester Green King Harry Nevell haue Haunce honor husband Iphicrates Jack of Newbury Jack's Jarmans jestbook John laugh London Long Meg Lord loue maid maidens Margaret marriage marry Master Maximinus Meg's merchant Merry middle class Mistress Eyre Mistress Farmer Mistress Frank Mistress Winchcomb murder neuer night novelist Old Bosom Peachy Peachy's plot poor quoth shee Randoll Pert reader realism reveals Robin scene servants Shakespeare shoemaker Simon Eyre Sir George song speak story style tells thinks Thomas Cole Thomas Deloney Thomas Nashe Thomas of Reading thou Ursula Viriat wealth weaver wedding widow wife William Winifred wives woman women young