Thomas Nashe's «Summer's Last Will and Testament»: A Critical Modern-Spelling Edition

Summary
First established as a «festive comedy» in the same tradition as many of Shakespeare's early comedies, C.L. Barber's pioneer analysis in Shakespeare's Festive Comedy (Princetion, 1959) attracted attention to Nashe's only play. Performed before the Archbishop of Canterbury and his entourage at Croydon Castle in 1592, Summer's Last Will and Testament is an innovative blend of allegorical pageant, satire, farce, and morality play. Nashe of course is better known for the racy, pungent style of his prose works, The Unfortunate Traveller (1594) and Pierce Penniless (1592). This modern-spelling edition provides a fresh collation of all eighteen extant copies of the copy-text, the 1600 quarto, as well as an historical collation. In addition, it provides a full critical introduction, glosses, and explanatory notes.
Similar Books
-
Othello: With Readers Guide
by William Shakespeare
-
The Three Musketeers
by Alexandre Dumas
-
Canterbury Tales
by Geoffrey Chaucer
-
The Cronicle History of Henry the Fift
by William Shakespeare
-
The History of Henry the Fourth
by William Shakespeare
-
All's Well That Ends Well
by William Shakespeare
-
Troilus and Cressida
by William Shakespeare
-
The Tragedie of Troylus and Cressida
by William Shakespeare
-
Henry VI, Part One
by William Shakespeare
-
The famous tragedy of the rich Jew of Malta
by Christopher Marlowe
-
The Alchemist
by Ben Jonson
-
Tamburlaine the Great; Parts I and II
by Christopher Marlowe
-
The Rape of Lucrece
by William Shakespeare
-
The Tragedy of Mariam
by Elizabeth Cary
-
The Works of John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester
by John Wilmot
-
Machiavelli's "The Prince" (Cliffs Notes)
by Stacy Magedanz
-
-
-
Shakespeare Imitations, Parodies and Forgeries
by Jeffrey Kahan
-
The Problem of the Shakespeare Plays
by George C. Bompas