The Complete Works of Christopher Marlowe: Volume IV: The Jew of MaltaOf English Renaissance dramatists, Christopher Marlowe arguably stands second only to Shakespeare in the minds of students, directors, and theatre-goers. Yet despite this fascination with the man and his works, until the present Oxford English Texts edition there has been no complete edition of the works that not only gives them in their original spelling - with full textual apparatus - but also supplies a detailed commentary. Marlow's Jew of Malta - a very popular play in its day, as entries in Henslowe's Diary testify - ranks as one of the most imaginative creations of Elizabethan drama, having no known antecedents for the main events of the plot, and no known counterpart for its protagonist. Here it is presented in a text derived from the 1633 Quarto, with an apparatus of emendations and a full commentary on sources, allusions, and the meaning of difficult passages. |
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Page 28
... present mony for them all . Enter BARABAS . BARABAS . In spite of these swine - eating Christians , ( Unchosen Nation , never circumciz'd ; Such as poore villaines were ne're thought upon Till Titus and Vespasian conquer'd us . ) Am I ...
... present mony for them all . Enter BARABAS . BARABAS . In spite of these swine - eating Christians , ( Unchosen Nation , never circumciz'd ; Such as poore villaines were ne're thought upon Till Titus and Vespasian conquer'd us . ) Am I ...
Page 86
... present you with ; receive it therefore as a continuance of that inviolable obliegement , by which , he rests still ingaged ; who as he ever hath , shall alwayes remaine , Tuissimus : THO . HEYWOOD . The Prologue spoken at Court ...
... present you with ; receive it therefore as a continuance of that inviolable obliegement , by which , he rests still ingaged ; who as he ever hath , shall alwayes remaine , Tuissimus : THO . HEYWOOD . The Prologue spoken at Court ...
Page 123
... present 1. 10 ( ' And ... Sicily ' ) . Craik argues convincingly that the phrase " Two lofty Turrets ' stands in apposition to ' ruines ' , but he ( followed by Bawcutt ) repositions the line after 1. 5 ( ' We ... entry ' ) . The present ...
... present 1. 10 ( ' And ... Sicily ' ) . Craik argues convincingly that the phrase " Two lofty Turrets ' stands in apposition to ' ruines ' , but he ( followed by Bawcutt ) repositions the line after 1. 5 ( ' We ... entry ' ) . The present ...
Common terms and phrases
ABBASSE Abigal ABIGALL ACT III SCENE Barabas's Bashawes BASSO Bawcutt Bellamira Bernardine BOSCO CALYMATH Christian Christopher Marlowe confesse Craik curse CURTEZANE daughter dead death Don Lodowick Don Mathias doth Dr Faustus Dyce e're emendation Enter BARABAS Enter GOVERNOR Enter ITHIMORE Exeunt Exit faith Farewell farre father feare Ferneze FRYAR give gold hath heaven Hero and Leander holy hundred Crownes I'le intreat ITHIMORE Jacomo Jew of Malta King Knights of Malta live LODOWICKE Lord Machevil Massacre at Paris Master Mdina Mediterranean MERCHANT mony ne're Nunnery Nuns OFFICER PILIA-BORZA play poyson poyson'd pray Prethe Prologue Reed Rhodes Scaena selfe Selim Selim-Calymath sinne Sirra slave sonne souldiers soule speake suggests summe sweet Tamburlaine tell thee there's thinke THOMAS HAMMON thou hast thou shalt Tilley Towne tribute Turke University Press unto villaine warres wealth wilt word yeeld