• 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...
    10 KB (1,412 words) - 03:19, 21 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Notebook
    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...
    19 KB (2,413 words) - 10:56, 22 July 2024
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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...
    14 KB (1,831 words) - 02:57, 30 July 2024
  • 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)...
    5 KB (469 words) - 18:26, 18 June 2024
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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)...
    17 KB (2,358 words) - 17:30, 24 March 2024
  • 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...
    16 KB (1,979 words) - 06:27, 15 November 2023
  • 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...
    3 KB (397 words) - 18:25, 30 July 2023
  • 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...
    10 KB (1,537 words) - 03:14, 3 September 2023
  • 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...
    12 KB (1,771 words) - 03:34, 16 January 2023
  • 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
  • the subject topical at the time. Like other Brome plays of the 1630s — The Weeding of Covent Garden, The New Academy, and The Sparagus GardenThe Damoiselle...
    11 KB (1,676 words) - 16:47, 20 March 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...
    4 KB (562 words) - 10:45, 18 December 2022
  • 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...
    11 KB (1,718 words) - 17:00, 20 August 2023
  • 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...
    13 KB (1,914 words) - 17:30, 3 July 2024
  • 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 Greek aspharagos...
    49 KB (5,008 words) - 23:07, 21 June 2024