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Henry Scogan (also Scoggin) (c.1361–1407) was an
English poet and
royal tutor.
Scogan belonged to a
landowning Norfolk family; inn 1391 he
succeeded his...
- Also part of the
party is Henry's
former schoolfriend, the
cynical Mr.
Scogan, who lies in wait for
anyone he can
waylay with his
reductive criticisms...
- World,
showing that
Huxley had such a ****ure in mind
already in 1921. Mr.
Scogan, one of the
earlier book's characters,
describes an "impersonal generation"...
-
Former Age
Fortune Gentilesse Lak of
Stedfastnesse Lenvoy de
Chaucer a
Scogan Lenvoy de
Chaucer a
Bukton Proverbs Balade to
Rosemounde Truth Womanly Noblesse...
- – as he
would have been a
contemporary of John Keats. The
character Mr.
Scogan expresses his
admiration for Lemprière's work as a
biographer and lexicographer...
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Scilla so unfortunate. I doe professe, by
Cupids beautious mother,
Heres Scogans choise for Scilla, and none other;
Though Scilla’s sick with greife, because...
- of Fowls), also
containing Henry Scogan's Moral Balad, and Chaucer’s
ballads Truth, Fortune, and the
Envoy to
Scogan The Book of
Cutesye Geoffrey Chaucer...
- on
public imagination is
supplied from the stage. A play (1600)
called Scogan and Shelton, by
Richard Hathwaye and
William Rankins, is
mentioned by Henslowe...
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Hannibal and Scipio, with
William Rankins,
January 1601. Not printed.
Scogan and Skelton, with
William Rankins, January–March 1601. Not printed. The...
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masque comes with the
introduction of the two
poets John
Skelton and
Henry Scogan. The
English theme is
stronger in the anti-masque, which, in
addition to...