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Examples
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San Satiro, a church that dates from 876, was restored by Bramante.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 10: Mass Music-Newman 1840-1916 1913
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The first Italian to write anything of this kind in a play seems to have been Cavaliere, but unfortunately his "Il Satiro" (1590) and "La Disperazione di Sileno" (1595) are known to us only through a comment of Doni, who censures them for pedantic affectations and artificialities of style, inimical to the truth of dramatic music.
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The late Mr. Halliwell Phillipps, in his curious privately printed volume (A Dictionary of Misprints, 1887), writes: "Such tests were really a thousandfold more necessary in editions of plays, but they are practically non-existent in the latter, the brief one which is prefixed to Dekker's Satiro-Mastix, 1602, being nearly the only example that is to be found in any that appeared during the literary career of the great dramatist."
Literary Blunders; A chapter in the "History of Human Error" 1893
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_Satiro-Mastix_, a retort to Jonson's _Cynthia's Revels_, 215
A Life of William Shakespeare with portraits and facsimiles Sidney Lee 1892
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Court, 'wrote Dekker in 1602, in his' Satiro-Mastix, '' [that] shall beget you the reversion of the Master of the King's Revels. '
A Life of William Shakespeare with portraits and facsimiles Sidney Lee 1892
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'Satiro-Mastix, or the Untrussing of the Humourous Poet.'
A Life of William Shakespeare with portraits and facsimiles Sidney Lee 1892
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Dekker, who wrote the greater part of _Satiro-mastix_.
A Life of William Shakespeare with portraits and facsimiles Sidney Lee 1892
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Shakespeare's company retorted by producing Dekker and Marston's 'Satiro-Mastix' at the Globe Theatre next year.
A Life of William Shakespeare with portraits and facsimiles Sidney Lee 1892
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` ` Such tests were really a thousandfold more necessary in editions of plays, but they are practically non-existent in the latter, the brief one which is prefixed to Dekker's _Satiro-Mastix_, 1602, being nearly the only example that is to be found in any that appeared during the literary career of the great dramatist. ''
Literary Blunders Henry Benjamin Wheatley 1877
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Next year (1602), Dekker replied with spirit to this attack, in a comedy entitled _Satiro-mastix_, where Jonson is called “Horace, junior.”
Character Sketches of Romance, Fiction and the Drama A Revised American Edition of the Reader's Handbook, Vol. 3 Ebenezer Cobham Brewer 1853
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