| Wendy Wall - 2002 - 312 str.
...literary fare of non-elite women. The chambermaid in Overbury's Characters, for instance, "reads Greenes works over and over, but is so carried away with the Mirror of Knighthood, she is many times resolv'd to runne out of her selte, and become a lady errant." Overbury, Characters in The Miscellaneous... | |
| Margaret W. Ferguson - 2007 - 520 str.
...Characters (c. 1613) describes a "chambermaid" with enough education to serve as a "she secretary" being "so carried away with the Mirror of Knighthood she...ladyerrant. If she catch a clap, she divides it... equally between the master and the servingman." 7 Well educated, although perhaps lower born than most... | |
| Laurie Maguire - 2003 - 260 str.
...go' " (p. 149). Overbury's imaginative detail extends even to the reading matter of a chambermaid: "She reads Greene's works over and over but is so...Knighthood, she is many times resolved to run out of her self and become a lady errant" (p. 101). It is a short step from here to Stanislavski's An Actor... | |
| Henry Thomas - 1969 - 372 str.
...and 1615. All three characters mentioned below appear in the sixth edition, 1615. She reads Greenes works over and over, but is so carried away with the Mirror of Knighthood, she is many times resolv'd to runne out of her selfe, and become a lady errant1. And that Sir Thomas Overbury's sketch... | |
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