 | John Dryden - 1987 - 994 pages
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 | Fredson Bowers - 1987 - 400 pages
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 | Mary Beth Rose - 1988 - 280 pages
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 | D. H. Craig - 1990 - 595 pages
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 | Michael J. Sidnell - 1991 - 332 pages
...great natural gifts, improved by study .... Their plots were generally more regular than Shakespeare's, especially those which were made before Beaumont's...them could paint as they have done, Humour, which Ben |onson derived from particular persons, they made it not their business to describe: they represented... | |
 | Hazard Adams - 1992 - 1304 pages
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 | D.H. Craig - 2002 - 523 pages
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 | 1996 - 584 pages
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 | Paul Hammond - 2002 - 484 pages
...before he writ Every Man in his Humour. Their plots were generally more regular than Shakespeare's, especially those which were made before Beaumont's...debaucheries, and quickness of wit in repartees, no poet can ever paint as they have done. This humour of which Ben Jonson derived from particular persons,... | |
 | Allardyce Nicoll - 2002 - 200 pages
...literary criticism for the next hundred years. In comparison with Shakespeare, Beaumont and Fletcher ' understood and imitated the conversation of gentlemen...no poet before them could paint as they have done'. Or, in his lines to Congreve : In easie Diaiogue ь p/eíc/,er's praise : He mov'd the Mind, but had... | |
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