Campaspe ; Sappho and Phao |
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Page 57
... ladies of honour . Alexander . I will know . - Madam , of whence you are I know , but who I cannot tell . Timoclea . Alexander , I am the sister of Theagenes , who fought a battle with thy father before the city of Chyeronie , where he ...
... ladies of honour . Alexander . I will know . - Madam , of whence you are I know , but who I cannot tell . Timoclea . Alexander , I am the sister of Theagenes , who fought a battle with thy father before the city of Chyeronie , where he ...
Page 58
... ladies into the city ; charge the soldiers not so much as in words to offer them any offence , and let all wants be supplied so far forth as shall be necessary for such persons and my prisoners . Exeunt PARMENIO and captivi . Hephestion ...
... ladies into the city ; charge the soldiers not so much as in words to offer them any offence , and let all wants be supplied so far forth as shall be necessary for such persons and my prisoners . Exeunt PARMENIO and captivi . Hephestion ...
Page 186
... ladies in I.iv need not be imagined in a different location , though their scene is so imprecisely located that they may also be imagined at court . No properties are required for Act I , though Phao may have an oar to identify his ...
... ladies in I.iv need not be imagined in a different location , though their scene is so imprecisely located that they may also be imagined at court . No properties are required for Act I , though Phao may have an oar to identify his ...
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Common terms and phrases
actors Actus Adagia Aelian Alexander Alexander's Amatoria Anaxarchus antithesis antithetical Apelles Apophthegmata appears Aristotle arrows Athens beauty Blackfriars Blackfriars theatre Blount Bond subst Callipho Callisthenes Campaspe Canope Chrysippus Chrysus cites Clitus colour comedy Compare Euphues compositor court courtiers courtly Criticus Cupid Cyclopes Dent Diogenes Drama dream edition Elizabeth Elizabethan Endymion English Enter Erasmus Erasmus's Eugenua Euphues Exeunt Exit eyes fair Favilla forge fortune Gallathea gods Granichus hath heart Hephestion I.iii II.ii Ismena John Lyly king ladies Laertius Laïs London Lyly's play Manes master meaning Mileta Molus never Ovid painting Pandion Parmenio performance Phao's Phaon philosophers Plato play's Pliny Plutarch presumably Prologue proverbial Psyllus quarto Queen reference Sappho and Phao Scaena scene seems Shakespeare Sibylla song speech spelling stage story suggests sweet Sylvius tells theatre thee thine thou art thought Timoclea Trachinus Tudor Udall Venus Vulcan women words ΙΟ