Tudor Drama and Religious Controversy |
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Page 86
... priest of the Old Faith . In either case , the humor derives from the discrepancy between the ideal and the real - the priest as he should be and as he actually is . In this function he differs little from Heywood's clerics , or even ...
... priest of the Old Faith . In either case , the humor derives from the discrepancy between the ideal and the real - the priest as he should be and as he actually is . In this function he differs little from Heywood's clerics , or even ...
Page 87
... priest was at liberty to remove his habit only in the privacy of his home . The fact that he foolishly ac- cepts Diccon's advice to enter Dame Chat's house secretly shows him to be indecorously meddlesome . The humor is thus heightened ...
... priest was at liberty to remove his habit only in the privacy of his home . The fact that he foolishly ac- cepts Diccon's advice to enter Dame Chat's house secretly shows him to be indecorously meddlesome . The humor is thus heightened ...
Page 105
... priest , although the humor of such responses may not have been intentionally humorous in all cases . For example , Tyranny , in the spirit of Elizabeth's ecclesiastical visitors , greets the priest and tells him , " I have a commission ...
... priest , although the humor of such responses may not have been intentionally humorous in all cases . For example , Tyranny , in the spirit of Elizabeth's ecclesiastical visitors , greets the priest and tells him , " I have a commission ...
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allusion antipapal appeal Archbishop audience authority Bale Bale's Barabas bishop of Rome Book of Homilies Cardinal Christ Christian Church of England claims clergy clerics confession corrupt Council of Trent crown declared Dissimulation doctrine dominions doth dramatists ecclesiastical controversy Edward effective Elizabeth Elizabethan Elizabethan Settlement English subjects excommunication father friars Gee and Hardy God's hath Henry VIII Henry's heresy heretic Holy Church Homilies humor hypocrisy invasion Ithimore Jesuits John's jurisdiction King John king's legate Lollards Mary monks Nobility obedience obey Old Faith ordered Pandulph papacy papal Parliament Philogonus Philologus polemical pope pope's Praemunire priest princes Private Wealth propaganda Protestant queen realm rebellion Reformation Regnans in excelsis reign religion religious controversy religious dispute Roman Catholic Romanist Royal Injunctions saints satire says scene scriptural Sedition sermons Settlement Shakespeare's Sir John spiritual Statute Stephen Langton superstition Supreme Head tells temporal thou throne tion treason Tudor Tyranny Usurped Power Vices Wyclif