The Sparagus Garden is a Caroline era stage play, a comedy by Richard Brome. It was the greatest success of Brome's career, and one of the major theatrical...
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Lost, Antonio's Revenge, The Sparagus Garden, The Fair Example, Every Man Out of His Humour, The City Wit, The Guardian, and The Citizen Turned Gentleman...
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1635 in literature (category Years of the 17th century in literature)
Free-Will Richard Brome – The Sparagus Garden Pierre Corneille – Médée William Davenant News from Plymouth The Platonick Lovers The Temple of Love (masque)...
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The play was a failure when it was first performed, although it won approval over the next generation or two. In Richard Brome's The Sparagus Garden (1635)...
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Richard Brome (category Wikipedia articles incorporating a citation from the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica with Wikisource reference)
printed 1659 The Sparagus Garden, performed 1635, printed 1640 The Damoiselle or the New Ordinary, c. 1638?; printed 1653 The English Moor, or The Mock Marriage...
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naturally into the same category – in addition to The New Academy, The Weeding of Covent Garden (c. 1632–33) and The Sparagus Garden (1635) are good...
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He printed James Shirley's The Grateful Servant (1637) for William Leake; and Richard Brome's The Sparagus Garden and The Antipodes for Francis Constable...
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works, like The Weeding of Covent Garden and The Sparagus Garden, of exploiting the actual locations of London for the settings of his scenes. In City Wit...
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in the trend toward "place realism" that was fashionable in the drama of the 1630s; his The Sparagus Garden, The Weeding of Covent Garden, and The New...
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previous play, The Sparagus Garden, had been one of the great theatre successes of the era, the company would sensibly have opened with a play by the most popular...
13 KB (1,995 words) - 15:04, 31 January 2024
Annabelle does in Brome's The Sparagus Garden. Other elements in the play's plotting and style also indicate Brome, in Harbage's view. The play's stylistic inconsistencies...
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Never Vexed (1632); Richard Brome's The Antipodes (1640); Brome's The Sparagus Garden (1640); Henry Glapthorne's The Lady's Privilege (1640); Glapthorne's...
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the few Shirley plays that was not acted by the rival Queen Henrietta's Men. In 1635 they had a major success with Richard Brome's play The Sparagus Garden...
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the subject topical at the time. Like other Brome plays of the 1630s — The Weeding of Covent Garden, The New Academy, and The Sparagus Garden — The Damoiselle...
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Asparagus (redirect from Garden asparagus)
classical Latin but the plant was once known in English as sperage, from the Medieval Latin sparagus. This term itself derives from the Ancient Greek: ἀσπάραγος...
49 KB (5,017 words) - 18:35, 21 September 2024