The Dragon and the Dove: The Plays of Thomas DekkerClarendon Press, 1990 - 241 pages This controversial study claims that Thomas Dekker, the author of plays blending satire, hagiography, and propoganda, was a militant Protestant, whose play The Dragon and the Dove is the definitive militant Protestant work. |
Table des matières
The AngloDutch Alliance in Dekkers Early Works | 16 |
Sir Thomas Wyatt and the Essex Rebellion | 44 |
The Whore of Babylon | 62 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
Actes and Monuments alliance Alphonso Antichrist apocalyptic apocalyptica audience Bartervile beast Bohemia Bowers Bradbrook Buckingham Calvinist Catholic City Clubb comedy Cordolente Court D. H. Willson Dekker's play Drama dramatists Dutch Earl of Essex Elector Elizabethan England English Entertainment Essex rebellion Foxe Foxe's Frederick Game at Chess Grosart Hammon hath haue Holiday Ibid ITBNAGP Jacobean John Jones-Davies Jonson King James King James's King of Spain King's Lacey London M. C. Bradbrook marriage masque Massinger militant Protestant militant Protestantism monarch Nero Oxford pageant Palatinate Parliament persecution play's plot political Prince Henry Protestant cause Protestantism Puritan Queen Elizabeth Raybright refers Reformation reign religious Roman Rome royal says scene Shoemakers Simon Eyre Sir Thomas Wyatt Spanish Match Spenser story suggests Sun's Darling Thomas Dekker throne Titania Tormiella Triumphans True Church tyrant Virgin Martyr vols vpon Webster Whore of Babylon Winter writes written Wyatt's rebellion