The Shakespeare Game, Or, The Mystery of the Great PhoenixAlgora Publishing, 2003 - 482 psl. Who was Shakespeare? In an intellectual sensation that went through three printings in the first year, a Moscow scholar presents a solidly documented work showing how, and why, the 5th Earl of Rutland wrote most of the Shakespeare oeuvre. Gililov has studied watermarks and printer's type, registration dates, and documented biographical details of Shakespeare contemporaries, considering the physical evidence as well as the personalities and motives of the suspects. |
Knygos viduje
Rezultatai 1–5 iš 43
x psl.
... Earl of Southampton 114 A Crow In Someone Else's Feathers 119 Cambridge and Oxford knew the Spear-shaker 124 A Self-Satisfied Pork-Butcher or a Melancholy Tailor? 138 A Portrait BenJonson Recommended Not Looking At 151 The Great Bard ...
... Earl of Southampton 114 A Crow In Someone Else's Feathers 119 Cambridge and Oxford knew the Spear-shaker 124 A Self-Satisfied Pork-Butcher or a Melancholy Tailor? 138 A Portrait BenJonson Recommended Not Looking At 151 The Great Bard ...
xiv psl.
... Earl's garment re- sembles the one shown in M. Droeshout's engraving ... Earl of Derby Edward de Vere, Earl of Oxford Christopher Marlowe A jester effigy ... Southampton 111 129 134 135 136 137 139 141 144 147 149 157 160 162 177 190 ...
... Earl's garment re- sembles the one shown in M. Droeshout's engraving ... Earl of Derby Edward de Vere, Earl of Oxford Christopher Marlowe A jester effigy ... Southampton 111 129 134 135 136 137 139 141 144 147 149 157 160 162 177 190 ...
76 psl.
... Earl of Southampton, in one of the books, he states this straight out: “I make your Honorable Lordship the first and most competent Censor, wishing that before you begin to read farther, you could but read my silence.” Edward Blount and ...
... Earl of Southampton, in one of the books, he states this straight out: “I make your Honorable Lordship the first and most competent Censor, wishing that before you begin to read farther, you could but read my silence.” Edward Blount and ...
84 psl.
... Earl of Southampton, to whom Shakespeare dedicated his first works — the poems “Venus and Adonis” (1593) and “The Rape of Lucrece” (1594). There is an extant letter from a contemporary in which it is said that Rutland and Southampton ...
... Earl of Southampton, to whom Shakespeare dedicated his first works — the poems “Venus and Adonis” (1593) and “The Rape of Lucrece” (1594). There is an extant letter from a contemporary in which it is said that Rutland and Southampton ...
88 psl.
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Turinys
1 | |
5 | |
7 | |
Chapter 2 A LongStanding Controversy About StratfordonAvon | 91 |
Chapter 3 The Chaste Lords of Sherwood Forest | 227 |
Chapter 4 Thomas Coryate of Odcombe the Worlds Greatest Legstretcher Alias the Prince of Poets | 319 |
Excerpts from the book Coryates Crudities | 359 |
Chapter 5 Death And Canonization Behind the Curtain | 389 |
Chapter 6 For Whom the Bell Tolled | 447 |
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Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
actors appeared authentic authorship Bacon Bard Bard’s Belvoir Ben Jonson biographies Blount Cambridge Chester book Chester collection contemporaries Coryate’s Countess of Bedford Countess of Pembroke Crudities daughter death dedicated documents Donne Earl of Essex Earl of Pembroke Earl of Rutland Earl of Southampton edition Elizabeth Rutland Emilia Lanyer England English engraving facts Folio Francis Francis Beaumont friends Gullio Hamlet hath Henry heroes John Weever Jonson King king’s lady later letter literary literature Lord Love’s Martyr manuscripts Marston Mary Sidney mask mentioned monument Muse mystery never non-Stratfordians noted Odcombe Odcombian Oxford Padua person Philip Sidney Phoenix playwright poet poetic poetry portrait printed published Queen reader Roger Manners Shakespeare scholars Shakespeare studies Shakespeare’s plays Shakespeare’s poems Shakspere Sidney’s story strange Stratford Stratfordian theater thee Thomas Coryate thou Turtle verses watermarks Weever William Shakespeare words writer written wrote young