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Alliterative romances of the 14th C.

Edward III (1327-1377) The Order of Garter

 

“Sir Gawayne and the Grene Knight” – 70s of the 14th c.

 

Clannesse Pacyence Pearl Roman de Rose

 

GOWER

John Gower (1330-1408) - medieval realism:

Vox clamantis Mirour de l’Omme Confessio Amantis

CHAUCER

Geoffrey Chaucer (1340-1400) rime royale

 

French, Italian and English periods of creative work:

Book of the Duchess (1369),

House of Fame, Parliament of Fowles (80s), Troilus and Criseyde (1385),

The Legend of Good Women ( 1386 ), The Canterbury Tales ( 1386-1389 )

ENGLISH LITERATURE OF THE 15th C.

Henry IV (1399-1413) Henry V (1413-1422) Henry VI (1422-1461)

The War of Roses (1455-1485) Henry VII Tudor battle at Agincourtе (1415)

the Battle of Bosworth Field (1485)

ENGLISH PROSE OF THE 15th C.

William Caxton (1421-1491) Bruges first typography in England (1476-1477):

"Sayings of the Philosophers", 1477; "Story about Jason and the Golden Fleece";

“Life of Carl the Great” (1485); “Paris and Vienna” (1488); “Morte d’Arthur” by Malory (1485), “The Right Plesaunt and Goodly Historye of the Foure Sonnes of Aymon” (1489), etc.

 

Reginald Pecock (1395-1460): “The Represser of Overmuch Blaming of the Clergie”

John Capgrave (1393-1464): “In regum” or "Book on Noble Henrys"; “Chronicle of England”

John Fortescue (1395-1476): "On Nature of Natural Law"; "The Praise of English Law", 1470; “The Difference between an Absolute and a Limited Monarchy”; “The Governance of England”

 

Epistolary prose prosaic romance “The Voiage and Travaile of Sir John Maundevile, Knight”

Sir Thomas Malory: “Morte d'Arthur” (printed 1485 by W.Caxton)

 

English Chaucer’s successors:

Thomas Hoccleve (1368?-1450?): "Letter of Cupid”, (ab.1402); "La Male Regle" (Bad Behaviour)(1406); “The Regement of Princes”, (1411-1412, 5463 verses); "The Art of Death" (Ars moriendi)

 

John Lydgate (1370?-1450?): “The Deserts of Theevish Millers and Bakers”; “The Ballad of Jack Hare”; “A Ballad wherin the Author Enumerateth Many Sorts of Fools, and Feigneth a Couvent of Fraternity of 63 Such”; "The Death Dance"; “Ballad on the Forked Head-Dresses of Ladies”; “A Satirical Description of His Lady”; “Advice to an Old Gentleman Who Wished for a Young Wife”; “The Complaint of the Black Knight”; “Troy Book”; “Siege of Thebes”; “Fall of Princes”, etc.

 

Th c.’s ENGLISH DRAMA

Miracula (miracle-play) – misterium (mystery-play) – moralite (moral play)

interlude - sideshow

 

“The Shrewsbury fragments” “A Treatise of Miraclis pleyinge”

 

Pageant “The Towneley Plays”

The English Literature of the 17th c.

1620-s – 1640-s:

Francis Beaumont (1584—1616) & John Fletcher (1579—1625)

By Beaumont alone:

The Knight of the Burning Pestle, comedy (performed 1607; printed 1613)

The Masque of the Inner Temple and Gray's Inn, masque (printed 1613)

With Fletcher:

The Woman Hater, comedy (1606; 1607)

Cupid's Revenge, tragedy (c. 1607–12; 1615)

Philaster, or Love Lies a-Bleeding, tragicomedy (c. 1609; 1620)

The Maid's Tragedy, tragedy (c. 1609; 1619)

A King and No King, tragicomedy (1611; 1619)

The Captain, comedy (c. 1609–12; 1647)

The Scornful Lady, comedy (ca. 1613; 1616)

Love's Pilgrimage, tragicomedy (c. 1615–16; 1647)

The Noble Gentleman, comedy (licensed 3 February 1626; 1647)

 

John Marston (1575—1634) -“Antonios Revenge” (1602); “The Insatiate Countesse” (1610)

Cyril Tourneur (1575 – 1626) – “The Revengers Tragaedie” (1607); The Atheists Tragedie; or, The Honest Mans Revenge (1611)

John Webster (1580 — 1625) -“The White Devil” (1612)

Thomas Middleton (1580—1627) – “The Phoenix” (1603); “A Yorkshire Tragedy” (1605, attributed to Shakespeare); “The Witch” (1616); “A Game at Chess” (1624);“Women Beware Women” (1621; p. 1657);

John Ford (1586 — c. 1640) -“'Tis Pity She's a Whore” (1633); “The Lover's Melancholy” (1629); “The Lady's Trial” (1639); “The Spanish Gypsy” (1653).

 

Inigo Jones

James Shirley (1596—1666) -“Love Tricks”, 1625; “The Wedding”, 1629; “The Bird in the Cage”, 1633; “The Lady of Pleasure”, 1637

Sir John Suckling (1609-1642) -“Aglaura” (pr. 1638); “The Goblins” (1638, pr. 1646)

William Davenant (1606-1668) -“The Wits” (1636); “The Spanish Lovers” (1639); “The History of Sir Francis Drake” (1659)

Ben Johnson (1573 — 1637):

“A Tale of a Tub” (1596); “Every Man in His Humour” (p.1601); “Every Man out of His Humour” (p.1600); “The Poetaster” (1601); “Volpone” (c.1606); “The Alchemist” (p.1612); “Bartholomew Fair” (p. 1631);


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