Cutts, John P., 1927-1986
Cutts, John P., 1927-....
Cutts, John P.
John P. Cutts professeur d'anglais à Wayne States University en 1968
VIAF ID: 12572689 (Personal)
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/12572689
Preferred Forms
- 200 _ | ‡a Cutts ‡b John P. ‡f 1927-....
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Cutts, John P.
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Cutts, John P. ‡d 1927-...
- 100 1 0 ‡a Cutts, John P. ‡d 1927-1986
- 100 1 _ ‡a Cutts, John P. ‡d 1927-1986
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Cutts, John P., ‡d 1927-....
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Cutts, John P., ‡d 1927-1986
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- 100 0 _ ‡a John P. Cutts ‡c professeur d'anglais à Wayne States University en 1968
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (6)
Works
Title | Sources |
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Beggars bush. Cast your caps and cares away | |
Beggars bush. Have ye any worke for the sow gelder hoe | |
Beggars bush. I met with the devell in the shape of a ramme | |
Bloody brother. Drinke to day and drowne all sorrowe | |
Bloody brother. Take o take those lippes away | |
Captain. Away delight goe seeke som other dwelling | |
Captain. Come hither, you that love, and heare mee singe | |
Captain. Tell me dearest what is love | |
Chances. Come away come away you Lady gay | |
Deerest love I do not go | |
Devil is an ass. Have you seene but a white lillie grow | |
Duchess of Malfi. O let us howle some heavy note | |
expiration | |
fairey masque | |
False one. Looke out bright eyes and cleere the aire | |
Farewell deere heart (1 v. et p.) | |
Fatal dowry. Poore citizen if thou wilt be | |
Gentle knights gentle knights | |
Goe and catch a fallinge star | |
Humorous lieutenant. I obay, I obay | |
hymne to God the father | |
The left hand of God; a critical interpretation of the plays of Christopher Marlowe | |
Love now noe fire hath left him | |
Lovers progress. Adeiw fond love | |
Lovers progress. Tis late and cold, stirr up the fire | |
Love's cure. Turne, turne thy beautious face away | |
Loyal subject. Will you buy any honesty come away | |
Mad lover. All these lye howling | |
Mad lover. Arme, arme, arme, arme the scuts are all com in | |
Mad lover. Carron, o Carron, thou wafter off the souls to blis or baine | |
Mad lover. Goe, happie hart, for thou sholt lie | |
Mad lover. O divinest God of love | |
Mad lover. Orpheus I am come from the deepe below | |
Mad lover. This lion was a man of warre that died | |
Maid in the mill. Com, follow me, you contrey lasses | |
Maid in the mill. You shall have crownes of roses | |
message | |
"The miserific vision" : a study of some of the basic structural imagery of "paradise lost" | |
More dissemblers besides women. Cupid is Venus only joy | |
La musique de scène de la troupe de Shakespeare : The King's men sous le règne de Jacques Ier | |
Nay nay you must not stay | |
Nice valour. Hence all you vaine delights | |
Nobleman | |
old couple. Deare doe not your faire bewty wronge | |
Pilgrim. Downe downe downe be still you seas | |
Poèmes de Donne, Herbert et Crashaw : mis en musique par leurs contemporains | |
poore soule sat sighing (1 v. et luth) | |
Queen of Corinth. Court ladies laugh and wunder | |
Queen of Corinth. Weepe no more nor sigh nor groane | |
Rebellion defeated : or, the fall of Desmond. A tragedy. By John Cutts | |
Rich and strange; a study of Shakespeare's last plays | |
Roger Smith, his booke Bishop Smith’s part-song books in Carlisle Cathedral Library | |
Rôle de la musique dans les masques de Ben Jonson et notamment dans Oberon | |
satyres masques | |
Seventeenth century songs and lyrics, 1959. | |
The shattered glass, a dramatic pattern in Shakespeare's early plays | |
Songs unto the violl and lube", Drexel Ms. 4175 | |
Spanish curate. Deerest doe not now delay me | |
Tempest. Full fathome five my father lyes | |
Tempest. Wher the bee sucks ther suck I | |
Thomas Nabbes's : "Hannibal and Scipio" | |
Valentinian. Care charming sleepe ye easer of all woes | |
Valentinian. Good Lyeus ever younge ever honour'd ever sunge | |
Valentinian. Now the lusty springe is seene | |
Volpone. Come my Celia let us prove | |
Widow. I keepe my horse, I keepe my whore | |
Wild goose chase. From the honerd dead I bring | |
Winter's tale. Get yee hence for I must goe | |
Winter's tale. Lawne as white as driven snow | |
Winter's tale. The Satyr's dance | |
Witch et Macbeth. Come away, come away Heckett | |
Witch et Macbeth. The Witche's dance II | |
witch. In a maiden time profest | |
Women pleased. O faire sweet face |