Lust’s Dominion. Published 1657. The view now seems to be that Dekker had a hand in it: in the form in which we have it it cannot be Marlowe’s. See also W. C. Hazlitt’s Manual of Old Plays, 1892.
Pue-fellow [pew-fellow.] Richard III, IV. 4.
The argument of Schlegel. Cf. Lectures on Dramatic Art and Literature (Bohn, 1846), pp. 442–4.
[208]. What, do none rise? Act V. 1.
Marlowe’s mighty line. The phrase is Ben Jonson’s, in his lines ‘To the Memory of my Beloved Master William Shakespeare, and what he hath left us,’ originally prefixed to the First Folio of Shakespeare, 1623.
I know he is not dead. Lust’s Dominion, I. 3.
Hang both your greedy ears, and the next quotation. Ibid. Act II. 2.
Tyrants swim safest. Act V. 3.
[209]. Oh! I grow dull. Act III. 2.
And none of you. King John, V. 7.