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  1. Author: John Lyly. Written: c. 1590. Earliest Extant Edition: 1592. Genre: Myth. Language Difficulty Rating: 5 (moderate difficulty). Setting: Ancient Phrygia in Asia Minor. The famous story of King Midas was told by Ovid in his Metamorphoses, and, like all of the myths contained in his collection, was well known to educated Englishmen.

  2. John Lyly is the first collection of essays dedicated solely to the work of this University Wit, celebrity prose writer, and playwright to the court of Elizabeth. Lyly's energy and wit inspired his contemporaries to follow new directions in prose fiction and stage comedy, and his writings still illuminate sixteenth-century culture for the modern reader.

  3. Daly, John J. 978-0-595-40159-8. This book is about the feelings and experiences of John J. Daly during his early teenage years and through to his premature death while in his early fifties. The poems illustrate the author's zest for life, feelings of love, as well as his times of sorrow and loss. 12.47€ (11.99€ sin IVA)

  4. 约翰·莱利(John Lyly)(; C。1553或1554 - 1606年11月;同样拼写了莉莉,莱莉,莱利)是一位英国作家,剧作家,朝臣和议员。他一生中最著名的两本书洋溢:《机智的解剖学》 (1578年)及其续集幼发和他的英格兰(1580),但现在也许以他的八场幸存戏剧而被人们记住,其中至少六部表演了在 ...

  5. John Lyly, Shakespeare's forerunner in English comedy, wrote eight highly individual plays. This study of the plays, with each chapter devoted to a different play, concentrates on the courtly aspects of Lyly's work - he wrote all but one of his plays for court performance.

  6. John Lyly once said, "Love is a mirror, reflecting our true selves," and this profound statement offers deep insights into the transformative power of love. Love has the unique ability to make us confront our deepest fears, strengths, weaknesses, and desires. It holds up a mirror to our souls, forcing us to see ourselves through a different lens.

  7. link.springer.com › referenceworkentry › 10Lyly, John | SpringerLink

    29 de sept. de 2020 · Biography. Lyly was educated at Oxford University (BA, 1573; MA, 1575) and had aspirations of returning to Oxford as a fellow at Magdalen College. His first two works, Euphues: The Anatomy of Wit (1578) and Euphues and His England (1580), were written to display his humanist credentials and promote his ambitions as a university scholar.