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Notes on the blank verse of Christopher Marlowe.  

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╨╧рб▒с>■  AC■   @                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                ье┴5@ Ё┐0▐9bjbj╧2╧2 (NнXнX0/н      ИЪЪЪЪЪЪЪоооо8ц Є<оUv::::::::╘╓╓╓╓╓╓$╦RК·Ъ:::::·ЪЪ::ввв:Ъ:Ъ:╘в:╘вв┤ЪЪ┤:. `аK{М╟о:^┤╘%0U┤з Ш з ┤ооЪЪЪЪз Ъ┤ ::в:::::··в Notes on the Blank Verse of Christopher Marlowe "Marloe was stabd with a dagger, and dyed swearing" A MORE friendly critic, Mr. A. C. Swinburne, observes of this poet that "the father of English tragedy and the creator of English blank verse was therefore also the teacher and the guide of Shakespeare." In this sentence there are two misleading assumptions and two misleading conclusions. Kyd has as good a title to the first honour as Marlowe; Surrey has a better title to the second; and Shakespeare was not taught or guided by one of his predecessors or contemporaries alone. The less questionable judgment is, that Marlowe exercised a strong influence over later drama, though not himself as great a dramatist as Kyd; that he introduced several new tones into blank verse, and commenced the dissociative process which drew it farther and farther away from the rhythms of rhymed verse; and that...

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