Grand Master
Registered: 09/20/01
Posts: 7205
Loc: Baltimore, MD
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Quote:
"No writer was ever more autobiographical than he was--it was a serious limitation upon him, especially for a dramatist. His creations are very much projections of himself--Tamburlaine, Dr. Faustus, the Jew of Malta,"
Rowse, A. L. Christopher Marlowe: His Life and His Work. Evanston, New York: Harper & Row, 1964
So one of the most pre-eminent Shakespearian Scholars of the 20th century was more than convinced that Marlowe wrote from a biographical standpoint, so much so that it directly effected and limited his creative output.
Great quote, Tom. Can you enlarge on this? It has never been clear to me exactly how this would be the case with Marlowe. I'm not contradicting the esteemed Dr. Rowse, just wondering how he transforms that assertion into an argument.
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