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  1. Abraham Cowley, Naufragium Ioculare (1638) and Charles Johnson, Fortune in her Wits (1705) A hypertext critical edition by. Dana F. Sutton The University of California, Irvine. Posted June 18, 2001 Revised March 27, 2002 . Table of Contents. Museum Home Page. Copyright statement

  2. Naufragium ioculare Renaissance Latin drama in England, 2] Volume 18 of Second Series: Plays Associated with the University of Cambridge: Author: Abraham Cowley: Editor: Hans-Jürgen...

  3. He wrote a pastoral drama and a Latin comedy, Naufragium Ioculare (1638), when he was but 20. During the English Civil War, the Parliamentary party deprived Cowley of his fellowship, but he had already left Cambridge to join King Charles at Oxford and, in 1644, followed Queen Henrietta Maria to France as her secretary.

  4. Introduction to a Latin comedy by Abraham Cowley . × Close Log In. Log in with Facebook Log in with Google. or. Email. Password. Remember me on this computer. or reset password. Enter the email address you signed ... Introduction to Abraham Cowley, Naufragium Ioculare (1638) Dana Sutton. 2001, ...

  5. Introduction to Abraham Cowley, Naufragium Ioculare (1638) and Charles Johnson, Fortune in her Wits (1705)

  6. philological.cal.bham.ac.uk › cowley › intronovel

    Very much in this tradition, Abraham Cowleys Naufragium Ioculare chronicles the foundation of another Sparta (called such at 1656), a School of Joking. 2.

  7. philological.cal.bham.ac.uk › hosp › introintro

    Four days earlier Abraham Cowley’s comedy Naufragium Ioculare had been acted at Trinity College. In Valetudinarium (IV.iii) two sots waking from a drunken sleep are convinced as a prank that they have slept for ten years and the world has changed radically in the meantime.