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4. Flasket and Linley’s The Tragedy of Dido Queen of Carthage (1594): Reissuing the Elizabethan Epyllion
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Melnikoff, Kirk
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Tables and Figures vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- A Note on the Text xiii
- Introduction 1
- 1. Geldings, “prettie inuentions,” and “plaine knauery”: Elizabethan Book-Trade Publishing Practices 27
- 2. Thomas Hacket, Translation, and the Wonders of the New World Travel Narrative 77
- 3. Richard Smith’s Browsables: A Hundreth Sundry Flowers (1573), The Fabulous Tales of Aesop (1577), and Diana (1592, 1594?) 99
- 4. Flasket and Linley’s The Tragedy of Dido Queen of Carthage (1594): Reissuing the Elizabethan Epyllion 137
- 5. Reading Hamlet (1603): Nicholas Ling, Sententiae, and Republicanism 155
- Notes 183
- Works Consulted 239
- Index 281
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Tables and Figures vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- A Note on the Text xiii
- Introduction 1
- 1. Geldings, “prettie inuentions,” and “plaine knauery”: Elizabethan Book-Trade Publishing Practices 27
- 2. Thomas Hacket, Translation, and the Wonders of the New World Travel Narrative 77
- 3. Richard Smith’s Browsables: A Hundreth Sundry Flowers (1573), The Fabulous Tales of Aesop (1577), and Diana (1592, 1594?) 99
- 4. Flasket and Linley’s The Tragedy of Dido Queen of Carthage (1594): Reissuing the Elizabethan Epyllion 137
- 5. Reading Hamlet (1603): Nicholas Ling, Sententiae, and Republicanism 155
- Notes 183
- Works Consulted 239
- Index 281