Marlowe's Tamburlaine: A Study in Renaissance Moral Philosophy |
Contents
The Problem of Interpretation | 1 |
Elizabethan Religion and Atheism | 21 |
Raleighs Religion | 50 |
Copyright | |
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A. B. Grosart ambition Aristotle atheism Atreus authority Bajazet Bartas beauty blood burlaine calls Calvin Chapman choler Christ Christian Christopher Marlowe Cosroe crowns cruelty Davies of Hereford death divine doctrine doth drama dramatist Du Bartas Elizabethan Ellis-Fermor English episode ethical euery Faerie Queene faith Fortescue Fortune fury George Whetstone Giovius God's gods Greville Grosart hath haue heaven Hercules hero human humanists Ibid interpretation king Lactantius laine's loue Machiavelli madness man's Marlowe Marlowe's McKerrow mind Mirror Mirror for Magistrates Miss Mornay Nashe nature Neo-Platonic neuer notion Orcanes pagan passions Platonic play Plotinus Plutarch Poems poetry poets Primaudaye Prince punishment Raleigh reason Reformation regarded religion religious Renaissance says Scourge Seneca Sidney siege of Damascus Sigismund significance soul Spenser spirit Stanza story Tamb Tambur Tamburlaine theory Theridamas things thou thought Thyestes tragedy tragic translation truth Turks tyrant vertue vnto vpon Zenocrate Zenocrate's