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  • ===Malone's "Attempt"=== ...r in which the Plays attributed to Shakspeare were Written" (1778), Edmund Malone listed 34 plays not known to have been printed. He included:
    5 KB (794 words) - 15:51, 10 December 2021
  • ...org/stream/playsandpoemswi18rowegoog#page/n239/mode/1up Malone, iii.230]). Malone knew "The Tyrant" to be also lost. '''Bentley,''' picking up the issue of an altered title, repeats Malone's association with "The Tyrant" and labels it scholars' favorite choice. He
    5 KB (813 words) - 14:10, 13 April 2016
  • ...misreading, and thus misspelling, of "gelyous"). Collier's opinion is that Malone's implied source, ''Julian of Brentford's Testament'', was "very far-fetche [[category:Edmond Malone]]
    5 KB (689 words) - 10:20, 15 September 2022
  • .... 87, n1). [[WorksCited|Fleay, ''BCED'' (2.303, #162)]], like [[WorksCited|Malone]], does not include a second and separate entry for "A French Comedy." [[Wo ...licate plays]][[category:Possibly corrupt titles]]Plays]][[category:Edmond Malone]]
    5 KB (675 words) - 10:20, 16 September 2022
  • ...ubsequent entry called Olempo and Hengens" (p. 296, n.6).[[category:Edmond Malone]] ...e initial name as "Seleo," then faults "the scribe" not only for repeating Malone's misreading but also settling (apparently incorrectly in Collier's opinion
    6 KB (838 words) - 12:13, 20 September 2022
  • ...slowesdiary02hensuoft#page/165/mode/1up pp. 165-6, #46]).[[category:Edmond Malone]][[category:John Payne Collier]]
    6 KB (866 words) - 12:58, 15 September 2022
  • ...y]]", and "[[Iphis and Ianthe, or Marriage without a Man]]" were entered) (Malone, "Additions" 319). He elsewhere repeated his criticism of the "tricking boo ...leagoog#page/n116/mode/2up (BCED 1.104)] arrived at the same conclusion as Malone vis-a-vis the older "Famous Wars" play, in what Bentley describes as one of
    10 KB (1,571 words) - 13:27, 29 July 2022
  • ...does not dismiss the possibility of similar narratives. [[category:Edmond Malone]] ...nd Dramatic Sources and Analogues]] above for the opinions of [[WorksCited|Malone]], [[WorksCited|Collier]], [[WorksCited|Fleay, ''BCED'']], and [[WorksCited
    6 KB (917 words) - 10:25, 15 September 2022
  • ...first appeared in Henslowe's listings for September 1595.[[category:Edmond Malone]]
    5 KB (703 words) - 11:56, 20 September 2022
  • ...60, as the production of Philip Massinger" (p. 297, n.9).[[category:Edmond Malone]] ...nuary entry as possibly an attempt at spelling the same title. Reinforcing Malone's conjecture, he also associates the Admiral's play with Philip Massinger's
    7 KB (1,002 words) - 09:52, 16 September 2022
  • ...he had ever encountered a copy of a printed edition (Bodleian Library, MS Malone 26, fol. 82; Tillotson 202); Percy had not. ...: A Lost Play by George Peele." ''Collections I, Parts IV and V''. Oxford: Malone Society, 1911), 307–14.</div>
    13 KB (1,953 words) - 22:07, 14 June 2021
  • ...s author as reported in Peck, as well as the praise by Meres (8:3). Edmond Malone raises and dismisses the possibility of such a connection: “From some wor <div style="padding-left: 2em; text-indent: -2em">Malone, Edmond, ed. ''The Plays and Poems of William Shakspeare''. 10 vols. London: Printe
    11 KB (1,714 words) - 13:51, 27 May 2016
  • ...http://www.archive.org/stream/playsandpoemswi18rowegoog#page/n311/mode/2up Malone, 3.304]); subsequent editions of the diary by Collier, Greg, and Foakes hav ...eg, opinion did not harden into fact. '''St. Clare Byrne''', editor of the Malone Society Reprint of ''John a Kent and John a Cumber'', acknowledges the scho
    24 KB (3,452 words) - 16:11, 15 September 2022
  • ...pecify which part. Nonetheless, he is most probably thinking ([[WorksCited|Malone]] too, probably) of the bulk purchase by the Admiral's men from Martin Slau '''Gurr''' repeats the assertion of Malone and Collier that Martin Slater (Slaughter) was the author of the two "Hercu
    14 KB (2,028 words) - 10:52, 19 September 2022
  • ...ohn Wilson's anthology ''The English Martyrology'' (1608) to conclude that Malone "does not know that there is such a personage as Richard the Confessor: whe ...eph. ''Cursory Criticisms on the Edition of Shakspeare published by Edmond Malone''. London: Hookham and Carpenter, 1792.</div>
    11 KB (1,707 words) - 12:31, 20 January 2022
  • [[WorksCited|Malone]], who first published a transcript of Henslowe's diary from the Dulwich Li [[WorksCited|Fleay, ''BCED'']] in 1891 repeats Malone's choice, tagging "Longshanks" as "a 'mended' version of Peele's" ''Edward
    17 KB (2,388 words) - 14:37, 4 October 2022
  • ...). Other characters include King Edward, Queen Katherine, their son Prince Edmond, the bastard Vallentinus and his mother Caliope, and the Duke of Suffolk, a [[WorksCited|Malone]] renders Henslowe's "perce" as "Pierce" but offers no opinion on the subje
    8 KB (1,170 words) - 16:11, 14 October 2022
  • ...Tamburlane" (p. 292). [[WorksCited|Collier]], rarely shy about calling out Malone's perceived errors, notes the misspelling of ''Tamburlaine''; significantly ...]] grants the "Tamar Cham" plays an independent identity.[[category:Edmond Malone]][[category:F. G. Fleay]]
    14 KB (2,053 words) - 10:27, 21 September 2022
  • '''Malone''', in a brief list of lost plays that appears in his Shakespearean chronol ...ds in the Declared Accounts of the Treasurer of the Chamber 1558-1642". In Malone Society ''Collections'' VI. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1961.</div>
    15 KB (2,220 words) - 15:56, 10 December 2021
  • [[WorksCited|Malone]] (1:60), discussing the "plot" of "[[Second Part of the Seven Deadly Sins, ...passage in Heywood to which Fleay refers (and which was noticed earlier by Malone in connection with the "Seven Deadly Sins") reads:
    13 KB (1,947 words) - 11:19, 20 September 2022
  • ...t00hazl#page/100/mode/2up 100]). The source for this information is Edmond Malone's record that Thomas Warton, author of ''The History of English Poetry'', c
    13 KB (1,913 words) - 14:22, 8 September 2020
  • ...Muly Molocco (Yoklavich, p. 296, 1.12). [[WorksCited|Collier]] agrees that Malone had identified the play "probably correctly" as Peele's (p. 21, n.1). [[Wor
    17 KB (2,539 words) - 10:49, 15 September 2022
  • ...e 1598 inventory transcribed by Edmond Malone. These papers were loaned to Malone by the librarians at Dulwich College, and the originals were subsequently l :Neither [[WorksCited|Malone]] (p. 294) nor [[WorksCited|Collier]] ((p. 35) comments on the historical c
    18 KB (2,541 words) - 12:31, 6 March 2023
  • ...ening's entertainment. That appeared only in the 1615 edition, expanded by Edmond Howes: <div style="padding-left: 2em; text-indent: -2em">Stow, John, and Edmond Howes. ''The Annales, or a Generall Chronicle of England''. London, 1615.</
    16 KB (2,541 words) - 13:01, 4 July 2018
  • '''Malone''' (259n) interpreted the June 28 alteration payment as evidence that the p <strong>Collier</strong> corrected Malone's assessment about authorship by noting the ''Diary'''s further payments to
    21 KB (3,135 words) - 17:33, 4 October 2022
  • ...nscriptions were published in 1790; subsequently, the originals were lost. Malone's transcriptions are here reprinted as by [[WorksCited|Greg, ''Papers'']] ( [[WorksCited|Malone]] attributes the play to Martin Slaughter (p. 298); [[WorksCited|Collier]]
    21 KB (3,085 words) - 14:50, 11 August 2022
  • ...e points out that George Steevens, the 18th-century contemporary of Edmond Malone, failed to record how he acquired various plots including the one for "Dead
    20 KB (3,201 words) - 15:08, 18 April 2022
  • ...such access, and the manuscript was returned to Dulwich College Library at Malone's death in 1812. Collier was the next scholar to have it in his hands. As t .... ([http://www.archive.org/stream/collections01malouoft#page/78/mode/2up ''Malone Society Collections, Vol.I'', Part 1.78-79]) ([http://www.archive.org/strea
    40 KB (6,428 words) - 20:58, 10 March 2021
  • :<b>Malone, 1790</b>. Just as this work was issuing from the press, some curious Manus (By the way, Malone in a note on this page provides an early instance of ‘Henslowe lumping’
    40 KB (7,225 words) - 11:24, 4 August 2022