Shakespeare s Ghost. William Shakespeare

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Shakespeare s Ghost. William Shakespeare"

Transcription

1 Shakespeare s Ghost William Shakespeare

2 CHRONOLOGY [W]e will both our judgments join In censure of his seeming Hamlet ( ) 1564 April 25: William Shakespeare christened in Stratford 1582 John Whitgift, Bishop of Worchester, waives the marriage banns for Shakespeare and Anne Hathaway 1585 Shakespeare s twins christened Shakespeare s Lost Years 1593 June 1-10: Spy Robert Poley, on official business for the queen, disappears for ten days, possibly assisting Marlowe to flee June 12: Venus and Adonis appears under Shakespeare s name? Marlowe in exile in Italy writing comedies 1594 The Rape of Lucrece published under Shakespeare s name Dr. Lopez, Elizabeth s Jewish physician, executed as a spy The Comedy of Errors performed at Grays Inn in London First mention of Shakespeare as a member of the Lord Chamberlain s Men Several Shakespearean plays published anonymously, including Titus Andronicus, Richard II, and Richard III 1598 Love s Labor s Lost, first play published under Shakespeare s name George Carey succeeds as patron to the Lord Chamberlain s Men 1599 Marlowe s works are revived and he possibly returns from Italy Archbishop Whitgift orders Marlowe s books burned The Globe Theatre opens and As You Like It debuts with a tribute to Marlowe and his death in Deptford 1600 Several plays registered under Shakespeare s name 1601 Richard II and the Globe actors implicated in the Essex Rebellion Shakespeare s troupe temporarily banished from court 1603 Queen Elizabeth dies and is succeeded by James I Lord Chamberlain s Men become the King s Men First Quarto of Hamlet published 1604 Archbishop Whitgift dies Second Quarto of Hamlet published 1609 May 20: Sonnets registered on anniversary of Marlowe s arrest 1616 Shakespeare dies and leaves second best bed to his wife 1623 First Folio published 114

3 WILL SHAKESPEARE ABSENTS HIMSELF FROM FELICITY AWHILE TO TELL MARLOWE S STORY O God, Horatio, what a wounded name Things standing thus unknown, shall live behind me? If thou didst ever hold me in thy heart, Absent thee from felicity awhile, And in this harsh world draw thy breath in pain To tell my story. Hamlet ( ) The Shakespeare Compact So likewise we will through the world be rung, And with my name shall thine be always sung. Ovid s Elegies (translated by Marlowe) ( ) he Shakespeare authorship controversy features not one, but two major specters. Besides the enigma surrounding Marlowe s meeting in Deptford and the question whether he was made a ghost or survived as a ghostwriter, Shakespeare s origin and development are s h rouded in mystery. Shakespeare sightings before 1593 are almost as rare as Marlowe sightings after that date. Aside from notices of family christenings, a marriage record, and scattered property and legal transactions, there is no documentary evidence about William of Stratford s literary career, including his education, early 115

4 116 Hamlet acting or writing experience, and arrival in the capital. A half-dozen plays later attributed to him in the First Folio were performed on the London stage before he is mentioned in connection with a theater company. The story that he got his start on the stage by holding the reins of a horse for a playgoer is probably as apocryphal as the tale that he left Stratford after poaching a nobleman s deer. Like a stream of electrons in a vacuum tube or the contrails of a supersonic plane, Shakespeare s physical existence between 1585 and 1594 (like Marlowe s after 1593) can be inferred but not seen. Whatever Will s antecedents, in The Shakespeare Company , Andrew Gurr presents an elegant solution to some of the vexing questions surrounding the realignment of the English theater during the year after Marlowe s death and the sudden appearance of the first works under Shakespeare s name. Gurr, an authority on the Elizabethan stage, suggests that Henry Carey, the lord chamberlain (also known as Lord Hunsdon), and his son-in-law Charles Howard, the lord admiral and patron of the Admiral s Men, concluded a deal to divide the London theater between their respective companies. As Gurr explains: A single company had been established eleven years before as the Queen s Men, but it had lost its hegemony. Setting up two companies was a sounder policy than having just one, since it gave better insurance against any future loss of the capacity to entertain royalty. London s two leading actors, Edward Alleyn and Richard Burbage, were each allocated a company of fellow-players and a playhouse belonging to someone in their family, and each company was given a set of already famous plays. One secured Marlowe s, the other Shakespeare s. 1 The Admiral s Men would continue to play in the Rose theater south of the city, using works written by Marlowe prior to his reported slaying as its chief repertoire, while the newly formed Lord Chamberlain s Men would perform at the Theatre north of the city, featuring the works posterity has attributed to Shakespeare. The recent deaths of Lord Strange and the Earl of Sussex added to the urgency of consolidation. Hunsdon s new troupe was formed in May 1594 from remnants of Lord Strange s Men, Lord Pembroke s Men, and other companies. Overall, the London theater had fallen on hard times after the plague had closed the stage for most of the previous year and a half. Except for brief spells, such as the debut of Kit s The Massacre at Paris in January 1593 and occasional tours in the provinces, most players were out of work between June 1592 and April The friendly rivalry between the two companies continued over the next decade, as the Chamberlain s Men moved into their new playhouse, the Globe, south of the city, in 1598, creating what Gurr calls the only effective democracy of its time in totalitarian England. 2 In counterpoint, the

5 Shakespeare s Ghost 117 Admiral s Men left the decaying Rose and moved to the newly built Fortune to the north. The two impresarios, James Burbage and Philip Henslowe, ran their respective theaters with a sympathetic but deft hand. Burbage s son Richard, the star of the Lord Chamberlain s Men, performed many of the leading Shakespearean roles, including Hamlet, which appear to have been composed with him in mind. At the Rose and later the Fortune, Edward Alleyn, the consummate tragedian of his time and Henslowe s son-in-law, continued to pack the house with revivals of Tamburlaine, Dr. Faustus, and The Jew of Malta. Although Gurr doesn t mention it, before the Lord Chamberlain s Men moved into the Theatre in the winter of , Henslowe produced Titus Andronicus, The Taming of a Shrew, and Hamlet, suggesting he already had access to the early versions of the Shakespearean plays and the Ur-Hamlet of Kyd and/or Marlowe. Up and coming Ben Jonson, who would succeed as the dominant playwright in the following decade, started to write for both companies. Following Elizabeth s death in 1603, the Lord Chamberlain s Men (which probably first staged Shakespeare s Hamlet) became the King s Men under James I s patronage, while the Admiral s became Prince Henry s Men, under the crown prince. Overall, the new arrangement provided London with the most sublime theatrical experience since ancient Athens. Yet financial security and economic stability may not have been the only motives for the consolidation. The two patrons, the Lord Admiral and Lord Hunsdon, were supporting actors, if not direct participants, in Marlowe s rescue. This web of correspondences suggests that the two patrons (with the approval and encouragement of the Cecils) deliberately entered into the new arrangement in order to provide a secure venue for Kit s new works. In all likelihood, buttressed by marriage alliances among three sets of families, Carey and Howard enthusiastically entered into the new arrangement not only for the material advantages it conferred but also out of shared inner convictions. Similarly, in the interest of secrecy, Marlowe himself appears to have willingly surrendered all credit for his subsequent works to William of Stratford. As privy councilors, both Carey and Howard had a history of sympathizing with religious reform and moderating the excesses of the archbishop and the churchmen. Many of Marlowe s early plays were performed for the admiral s company, and he may have served as an intelligencer for the naval commander during the Armada campaign. Howard had served as lord chamberlain in and evidently arranged for his cousin, Edmund Tilney, to serve as Master of the Revels and oversee performances at court and on the London stage. Hunsdon succeeded Howard in this post and both men naturally would have resented John Whitgift s heavy-handed move to seize control over the registration and censorship of plays. Huns-

6 118 Hamlet don s son, Sir George Carey, was the knight marshall with authority over the verge the sovereign zone around the queen s person that played a pivotal role in Marlowe s murder investigation. Both Hunsdon and the admiral had been accused of atheism in the dossier prepared against Marlowe and knew how trumped up charges could assume a life of their own. In addition to the orthodox theologians on the right, they had to navigate around the Puritans and city commissioners on the left who would close down the theater altogether. The Lord Mayor was appeased by a ban on players using city inns, Gurr observes, explaining the compromise arrived at. Now plays could be confined to the two counties north and south of the city where Howard controlled the local magistrates. 3 Again in 1600, when the London theaters were closed following a crackdown by the archbishop on seditious and lewd material, the Privy Council allowed only the Lord Chamberlain s Men and the Lord Admiral s Men to perform, reaffirming the arrangement struck six years earlier. Anthony Marlowe, Kit s kinsman, may have also played a role in the arrangement. The influential manager of the Muscovy Company signed an appeal to the Privy Council supporting construction of the new Fortune theatre, where the Lord Admiral s Men, Kit s old company, intended to move. It is possible that the elder Marlowe contributed some support to his junior relation, possibly even financing or defraying his expenses in selfimposed exile. Because of his ties to Deptford, Anthony Marlowe and the Lord Admiral would have been especially close. In Shakespeare s Ghost, we will examine the broad contours of how these arrangements played out. Printer Richard Field and patron Southampton were particularly instrumental in launching the new relationship. Overall, I hesitate to call the entire phenomenon the Shakespeare conspiracy or plot because these terms have a pejorative connotation. The Shakespeare caper, sting, or op are too frivolous, and the Shakespeare matrix or shaxpeare Files smacks of the occult. From beginning to end, the authorship question resembles nothing so much as a dramatic partnership and a comic one at that. I have decided to refer to it as the Shakespeare Compact, which is meet, or appropriate, as the gravediggers in Hamlet would say. The performative elements involved include a faked death, mistaken and switched identities, baseless slanders, supernatural effects, and the union of high and low patrons and poet, university wit and talented country boy, nobles and groundlings which echo the Shakespearean comedies themselves. The mutual bonds between Marlowe and Shakespeare, Hunsdon and Howard, Henslowe and Burbage, and their supporting cast constitute a marriage of true minds that brought happiness and blessings to a gilded but deeply flawed age and to a grateful posterity.

7 Shakespeare s Ghost A Mechanical Solution It was in the counting and plotting of the plays of Christopher Marlowe, however, that something akin to a sensation was produced among those actually engaged in the work. In the characteristic curves of his plays Christopher Marlowe agrees with Shakespeare as well as Shakespeare agrees with himself. Dr. Thomas Mendenhall, A Mechanical Solution for a Literary Problem n the absence of definitive evidence such as signed manuscripts of the poems and plays, a secret diary, or other historical documents the case for or against any candidate for the authorship of Shakespeare s works remained open. Historians and literary critics analyzed the circumstantial evidence and arrived at opposite conclusions. A more objective standard of determining the provenance of disputed writings, stylometric studies, emerged early in the twentieth century with the scientific analysis of literary works that eliminated as much as possible personal evaluations and judgments. The story of Shakespeare s Literary Fingerprint begins during Reconstruction, following the U.S. Civil War. Dr. Robert Mendenhall, a physics professor at Ohio State University and president of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, devised a mechanical method to determine the author of a disputed work. By counting the number of letters in each of the words of an author s literary corpus whether prose or poetry, a letter or a novel and plotting the total number of words of twoletters, three-letters, four-letters, etc., on a graph, a unique individual ratiocurve appears. No two people exhibit exactly the same proportion; thus given a sufficient number of words ideally 100,000 or more the real identify of a disputed or anonymous document could be ascertained with near certainty. Mendenhall reported his discovery in an article in Science on May 11, The chief merit of the method consisted in the fact that its application required no exercise of judgement, he explained.... Characteristics might be revealed which the author could make no attempt

8 120 Hamlet to conceal, being himself unaware of their existence... The conclusions reached through its use would be independent of personal bias, the work of one person in the study of an author being at once comparable with the work of any other. 4 During the hotly contested presidential election of Rutherford B. Hayes and James G. Blaine, he became intrigued with unsigned editorials in the New York Herald. The articles contained a small total number of words, making the margin of error quite high, but even so, Mendenhall discovered that the ratio-curves matched those of Blaine s niece, a widely read author. As the new century began, a prominent Baconian approached Mendenhall, asking him to apply his method to the Shakespeare authorship controversy. A theory originally introduced in the mid-1800s held that Sir Francis Bacon, the philosopher, essayist, and lord chancellor under James I, was the real author of the sonnets and plays. But the Bacon hypothesis soon became mired in the quest for secret codes, hidden ciphers, and other occult evidence. As can be seen in the books today on a code hidden in the Bible, virtually anything could be read into the literary entrails of the Folio, whose obscure orthography, misplaced fonts, and other irregularities appeared to have been composed by the clowns in Dr. Faustus or the gravediggers in Hamlet. In this maddening jumble of text and type, Baconians saw Kabbalistic revelations of Sir Francis s hidden hand communicating in code with his brother Anthony, the spymaster. Accepting the challenge, Mendenhall hired a team of young women to count the words in the First Folio, Bacon s Advancement of Learning and other writings, and as a control, over a million words from the writings of other Elizabethan poets, including Marlowe, Beaumont and Fletcher, and Jonson. To the disappointment of his patron, but not surprisingly to anyone who has read Bacon s turgid prose, Mendenhall found that Bacon s ratiocurve was light years apart from the author of Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet, and the other masterpieces. However, the tedious undertaking did not go for nought. It was in the counting and plotting of the plays of Christopher Marlowe, however, that something akin to a sensation was produced among those actually engaged in the work, Mendenhall reported in December, In the characteristic curves of his plays Christopher Marlowe agrees with Shakespeare as well as Shakespeare agrees with himself. 5 Today s computer technology makes stylometric studies such as these faster, more reliable, and more sophisticated. A recent computerized study replicated and corroborated Mendenhall s original study. English researcher Peter Farey found a correlation of up to percent between Marlowe s plays and those attributed to Shakespeare. 6 A recent stylometric study of function words such as but, and and the found a distinct difference

9 Shakespeare s Ghost 121 between the Marlovian and Shakespearean canons. 7 However, taking probable date of composition into account, Farey found that Marlowe s and Shakespeare s curves progressed with age and meshed exactly. He also looked at the percentage of run-on lines and feminine endings (in which an extra syllable is added to the regular iambic line of ten syllables) and found a perfectly smooth curve can be seen to pass through the two groups of plays. In a further development, Louis Ule, a statistician and editor of a Marlowe concordance, found that Marlowe and Shakespeare s vocabulary were virtually indistinguishable. The rate that each canon added new words (known as hapax-legomena) to new plays differed by only 1 percent. 8 Ule also found that the expected vocabularies among different genres (such as dramatic works, amorous poems, and moral poems) is much the same for Marlowe as it is for Shakespeare. 9 Several other stylometric studies have also shown a strong correlation between individual plays by Marlowe and Shakespeare. For example, Kit s The Jew of Malta contains an average of props (e.g., swords, crowns, scepters, coins, etc.) per thousand lines, compared to an average of for the Shakespearean tragedies as a whole, while other Elizabethan works range from 4.2 to In writing this book, I was struck by the similarity between the use of biblical imagery in Hamlet and in Marlowe s earlier plays. Turning to two standard reference works, I compared the use of biblical references, allusions, and echoes in the writings of Marlowe and Shakespeare. The books were Christopher Marlowe s Use of the Bible, edited by R. M. Cornelius, a p rofessor of English at Bryan College, and Biblical References in Shakespeare's Plays, edited by Naseeb Shaheen, who has published many articles on Shakespeare in scholarly journals. These compendiums show that both Marlowe and Shakespeare relied primarily on the Geneva Bible (the scripture favored by the Puritans), followed by the Bishop s Bible, and that each made infrequent references to one of several other English bibles that were circulating at the time. A statistical comparison of the references reveals a striking similarity between the overall use of the scriptures. Both the Marlovian and the Shakespearean works refer to the Gospel of Matthew more than to any other book in the Bible. The Book of Psalms is the second most popular book referred to in each canon. In fact, as the accompanying table shows, eight of the top ten books are the same. Revelation and the Gospel of John are referred to more in Marlowe than in Shakespeare. One explanation for this would be that, after the Baines Note accusing him of blaspheming the apostle John, Marlowe consciously or unconsciously shied away from referring to John s work, including Revelation, which was traditionally assigned to him. Instead, the Shakespeare works rely more often on Mark and Proverbs.

10 122 Hamlet Table 3. Frequency of Biblical Allusions and Echoes in the Marlovian and Shakespearean Works Rank Marlowe Shakespeare Hamlet 1. Matthew Matthew Psalms 2. Psalms Psalms Genesis 3. Revelation Luke Job 4. John Genesis Matthew 5. Luke Job Proverbs 6. Isaiah Revelation I Corinthians 7. Job Mark Isaiah 8. Romans Romans Revelation 9. Genesis Isaiah Luke 10. Hebrews Proverbs Ecclesiasticus The total number of references is also comparable. Dividing Marlowe s 1037 primary biblical references or echoes into eleven groups, including seven plays, three narrative poems, and short works (all grouped together), Professor Cornelius s count averages out to 94.3 references per work. The list of 3483 biblical references in Shakespeare, divided among the thirty-nine plays indexed (including those in the First Folio, Pericles, Two Noble Kinsmen, and Sir Thomas More) averages 91.7 references per play a difference of 3 percent. Of course, this comparison is very approximate, since the two editors may have selected references based on different literary criteria and their own subjective reading of the works. In annotating Hamlet for this edition, I identified more biblical references (see Annotations), bringing the total allusions and echoes in the play to 135. According to this reckoning, Hamlet alludes to forty of the eightytwo books in the Elizabethan era Bible, including, the Apocrypha, or just under one half. The Psalms and Genesis with twelve references or echoes each are tied for first, followed by Job with eleven and Matthew and Proverbs with ten each. Seven of the top ten books, including Isaiah, Luke, and Revelation, are the same as those in the above table. New additions include 1 Corinthians, Ecclesiasticus, and Proverbs, which is number ten on the overall Shakespearean list, but not in the top ranks of the early Marlovian works. Again, the overall pattern remains consistent. In comparison to Marlowe and Shakespeare, other Elizabethan playwrights used the Bible much less frequently. Thomas Kyd s The Spanish Tragedy, a primary dramatic source for Hamlet, has only seven references,

11 Shakespeare s Ghost 123 while Marton s Antonio s Revenge, a revenge tragedy that may also have made use of the lost Ur-Hamlet (attributed to Kyd and/or Marlowe), has only eight biblical correspondences, according to the experts. If this significantly lower frequency of biblical references holds up in the writings of other playwrights, we can tentatively conclude that the Marlovian and Shakespearean works refer to the Bible about ten times more often than those of other contemporary dramatists. Finally, there is a significant overlap among the references in Marlowe and Shakespeare. For example, about 20 percent of the passages in the Bible referred to in Dido (eight out of thirty-seven) are also alluded to in Shakespeare s plays. In the first part of Tamburlaine, the percentage rises to nearly 40 percent (fifty-four out of 137 references), including fourteen out of seventeen references to the exact same passages in Matthew and ten of seventeen in Revelation. 11 As we might expect, a profound knowledge of holy writ fits the profile of Marlowe, who prepared for the ministry at Cambridge, studied Latin and Greek, and received his M.A. in theology. There is nothing in Shakespeare s life to suggest that he had comparable learning or religious sophistication. Actually there is a significant difference in the use of scripture in the two canons. In an introductory essay, Professor Cornelius marvels at Marlowe s scrupulous use of the Bible in his works. The treatment of judgment, which appears in all of his plays, is quite detailed and balanced, for Marlowe refers to both pains and punishments, rewards and righteous justice. In general, he is Biblically orthodox in presenting God as sovereign with respect to the machinations of men. 12 In contrast to Marlowe, Shakespeare, he asserts, is much more provocative, frequently using biblical humor and levity to make a point and even verging on flippancy! As examples, he cites The Two Gentlemen of Verona, in which Launce compares himself to Christ; The Comedy of Errors, in which even Noah s flood could not clean the face of Nell, the greasy kitchen maid; and Much Ado About Nothing in which women are claimed to be superior since men are made from dust. None of these instances has a counterpart in Marlowe, he observes. 13 How can we explain this discrepancy? Like a sketch artist who composes a drawing of a missing child or adult that attempts to approximate how the person has aged, we need only focus Marlowe s literary light through the prism of the events in Deptford to see how it manifests differently in the guise of Shakespeare. After May 30, 1593, Marlowe wrote from the comparative freedom and safety of exile rather than under the direct gaze of the London censor, which could account for the emergence of this satirical strain, especially in the Italian comedies. This tendency reaches its zenith in Hamlet s puns on the Lord s Supper and the graveyard scenes.

12 124 Hamlet The lighter theological vein accords with the general thematic change from the Marlovian plays, which dramatize the effects of evil, to the works attributed to Shakespeare, which focus on the restorative powers of the good. After Deptford, Kit appears to have transformed his inner demons and furies into angels and benevolent elves and fairies. He continued to invoke the spirits of darkness, especially Hecate, the queen of Night, but he let her inner radiance shine. Like his namesake Merlin and his hero Ovid, author of Metamorphoses, Kit mastered the art of transmutation, magically changing night into day, tragedy into comedy, and revenge into an immortal meditation on the human condition. In brief, scanning Marlowe s and Shakespeare s literary and theological DNA proves a close, if not an exact, match. A variety of scientific, linguistic, and religious comparisons shows beyond a reasonable doubt that their collected works were composed largely by the same hand. 2 The Muse s Springs Let base-conceited wits admire vile things, Fair Phoebus lead me to the Muses springs. Shakespeare, Venus and Adonis (motto from Ovid s Amores) The First Heir of My Invention Marlowe is the greatest discoverer, the most daring pioneer, in all our poetic literature. Before Marlowe there was no genuine blank verse and genuine tragedy in our language. After his arrival the way was prepared, the path made straight for Shakespeare. Algernon Charles Swinburne s if on cue, following Christopher Marlowe s death and sudden exit from the Elizabethan stage, Will Shakespeare made his literary entrance with publication of Venus and Adonis. Composed in the same style and tone as Hero and Leander, the lyrical narrative was registered anonymously with the Stationers Company on April 18, 1593, about the time the first anti-alien libels were

13 Shakespeare s Ghost 125 posted in London. Ironically, the poem was approved by Archbishop John Whitgift, who oversaw publication of all printed material and whose name appears on the registry. Anonymous authorship was not uncommon in an era when theater troupes or printers owned the rights to a play. In William Shakespeare: A Compact Documentary Life, Stanley Schoenbaum mentions the appearance of a printed copy of Venus and Adonis with Shakespeare s name as early as June There is no author listed on the title page, and the dedication page with Shakespeare s name appears to have been inserted into the volume after publication. This suggests that he volunteered or was chosen to take the credit for the poem in the two weeks after Marlowe s death in Deptford. Dedicated to Henry Wriothesley, the Earl of Southampton, Venus and Adonis was offered as the first heir of my invention. Why was this young nobleman the dedicatee? A grandson of a former lord chancellor under Henry VIII, Southampton became a ward of William Cecil, or Lord Burghley, at age eight following the death of his father. In London, he lived with Burghley and his family in Cecil House in the Strand and was brought up like a son. Although the boy was a Catholic, when he was twelve, Burghley enrolled him at St. John s College at Cambridge, a Puritan stronghold, where he received his master s degree in June 1589, just two years after Marlowe did. Hence their stay at the university overlapped by about five years. In 1588, through Burghley s influence, Wriothesley was admitted to Gray s Inn, one of the inns of court or law schools. The following year he was introduced to the queen and soon acquired a reputation as a generous patron of literature and the arts. In the early 1590s, he accompanied Essex to France and in later years participated in military expeditions to the Azores, Cadiz, and Ireland. Southampton s wealth, rising influence at court, and intellectual and cultural interests made him the perfect patron. In addition to Venus and Adonis, The Rape of Lucrece another narrative poem attributed to Shakespeare that came out in 1594 is dedicated to Southampton. In 1605, the earl sponsored a performance of Love s Labor s Lost in his home at which Queen Ann, the wife of James I, attended. Some critics believe that the sonnets addressed to the Fair Young Man allude to an intensely personal relationship between Shakespeare and his patron and that the mysterious Mr. W. H., to whom the Sonnets are dedicated, is Henry Wriothesley, with his initials reversed. However, there is no direct evidence linking the wealthy aristocrat and the Stratford actor. According to Shakespearean scholar A. L. Rowse, Leander, the tragic hero in Hero and Leander, is modeled on Southampton, and the earl patronized Marlowe as well as Shakespeare. But again there is no evidence for such a tie or an intimate connection.

14 126 Hamlet Another possibility, advanced by poet Ted Hughes, is that Burghley commissioned Venus and Adonis as part of his campaign for Southampton to marry his granddaughter, Elizabeth Vere. When Wriothesley rejected the proposed match, he explains, Cecil arranged for John Clapham, one of his secretaries, to compose an allegorical poem, Narcissus, derived from the classical tale, about a young man who abandons Venus, the goddess of love, for self-love, falls into a pool and drowns, and is turned into a flower. Shakespeare s poem, while the same campaign was still in full swing, could well be seen as a continuation of Clapham s brief, almost as if it had been commissioned for the purpose, Hughes suggests. It has been pointed out that one possible explanation for the fact that this daringly erotic poem was approved and licensed by one of the most morally severe theological censors of the age, Whitgift, the Archbishop of Canterbury, was that Burghley somehow authorized it. 15 Of course, as England s leading poet and a government agent already reporting to Cecil, Kit would have been a far more likely candidate to be tapped for the assignment than the unknown William of Stratford. A clue to the possible relationship between Shakespeare and Southampton comes from Dr. John Ward, a London physician, who moved to Stratford in the 1660s, became vicar of the local church, and lived there for nineteen years. Curious about Shakespeare s life, Ward reported that Shakespeare supplied ye stage with 2 plays every year, and for yt had an allowance so large, yt hee spent att the Rate of a 1,000 a year as I have heard. 16 According to Ward s diary, he met with Shakespeare s surviving relatives, friends, and neighbors who knew him before he died in 1616, including Thomas Hart, his nephew, and a Mrs. Queeny, who is apparently Judith Shakespeare, the actor s daughter, who married Thomas Quiney and died in her late seventies. In his diary, Dr. Ward writes: I have heart yt Mr. Shakespeare was a natural wit, without any art at all; he frequented ye plays all his younger times, but in his elder days lived at Stratford. 17 This description suggests that he was natively intelligent but had little formal training ( any art at all ) and that he worked in the London theater in early manhood (though apparently not as a writer) and retired in late middle age to his boyhood home. Traveling troupes of players came to Stratford periodically, and young Will may have come under the spell of the theater at that point. In any event, it would have been unprecedented for any poet to receive a thousand, much less a hundred, pounds for a manuscript. The typical payment for a play was several pounds at most, and a printed edition that was successful and broke even on sales of 500 copies would typically make a profit of 1 a year. Once for a special performance, the Globe theatre received 40 shillings to make

15 Shakespeare s Ghost 127 up for the anticipated loss at the gate. By comparison, the annual budget for the entire Elizabethan secret service was only about 2000, and after expenses the archbishop of Canterbury earned 1500 a year. While Shakespearean biographers today tend to ignore Ward s diary, Nicholas Rowe, Shakespeare s first biographer, also reported that Southampton bestowed 1000 on the young actor early in his career. 18 Whether given to Shakespeare once at the launch of his career or annually, the enormous figure suggests a business agreement to run a theater company rather than write individual plays. 19 The earliest plays attributed to Shakespeare are believed to have been composed and performed between 1587 and The last Shakespearean plays are dated to about The First Folio contains thirty-six plays, and there are several more such as Edward III that literary experts now generally assign to his hand. The interval between these two dates, some eighteen to twenty years, corresponds with the production of about forty plays, or two a year. Some skeptics speculate that the fantastic payment to Shakespeare was a bribe, or even blackmail, not to reveal his part in the masquerade. More likely, it was used by the novice actor or stage manager to became a shareholder in a theater company. It is unnecessary to impugn Shakespeare s character or attach primarily financial motives to the arrangement. Compounding the mystery, Shakespeare s formative years are a complete blank. The first documented account of his presence in London is in late The meager facts suggest that William of Stratford was employed immediately after the events in Deptford to serve as a theatrical stand in and literary alias for Marlowe and prior to this time had no major involvement in the world of arts and letters. Burghley, who had served as Henry Wriothesley s guardian and de facto father since early adolescence, evidently made the arrangements. He watched over both Southampton and Marlowe at Cambridge, where he was chancellor, and it is reasonable to conclude that they knew each other from their university days. There is simply no information about when Shakespeare first came to the capital or became involved in the stage. Shakespeare s dark years a virtual cipher between 1585 and 1594 allow for many potential relationships to have developed among the principals. The most plausible is contact between Marlowe and Shakespeare at the Rose or some other theatrical venue where the careers of the two young men born within two months of each other may have intersected in the late 1580s or early 1590s. In his hometown, Will is last mentioned in connection with the birth of twins, Judith and Hamnet, to him and his wife, Anne Hathaway, in Nine years later, in 1594, he is listed with Will Kempe and Richard Burbage as members of the Lord Chamberlain s Men in London who received payment for a performance at

16 128 Hamlet court. In the interim, Will may have served Lord Strange s Men or the Earl of Pembroke s Men as a prop man, stage manger, or member of the cast. The stipend he received in 1594 does not specify his services, but Kempe and Burbage were both actors. The case for Shakespeare as a budding poet and dramatist at this early period rests largely on a pun. In Greene s Groatsworth of Wit, Robert Greene warned dramatists not to trust actors because of their mendacity and lack of learning. In his splenetic narrative, he singled out an upstart Crow... that with his Tygers hart wrapt in a Players hyde, supposes he is as well able to bombast out a blanke verse as the best of you: and... is in his owne conceit the onely Shake-scene in a country. 20 On the basis of the pun on Shake-scene and the parody of a passage in 3 Henry VI, O tiger s heart wrapp d in a woman s hide! ( ), scholars have concluded that this is the earliest known literary reference to Shakespeare. Published in 1592, it appears to place William of Stratford as solidly employed within the London theater and to document the formative stage of his acting and writing career. As the chief source for The Winter s Tale and a minor source for Troilus and Cressida, Greene evidently knew young Shakespeare and, it has been suggested, even collaborated with him on Titus Andronicus, 1 and 2 Henry VI, The Comedy of Errors, The Two Gentlemen of Verona, and other early works. Yet, in Christopher Marlowe and Edward Alleyn, A. D. Wraight shows convincingly that Greene referred not to Shakespeare but to Alleyn. Starring in the title role of Marlowe s Tamburlaine, Alleyn had risen to prominence as an actor and was known to shake a stage, a common term for great actors of that time. As the manager of the Lord Admiral s Men as well as a tragedian, he employed Greene as a writer, but they had a falling out. 21 The tiger s heart line is actually from The True Tragedy of Richard, Duke of Yorke, the early version of 3 Henry VI, a play that some scholars independently assign to Marlowe. I would also point out that two years earlier in Never Too Late, Greene had taunted Alleyn and Marlowe in similar language: Why Roscius [Alleyn], art thou proud with Esop s Crow, being pranct with the glorie of others feathers? of thy selfe thou canst say nothing, and if the Cobler [Marlowe, the shoemaker s son] hath taught thee to say Ave Caesar, disdain not thy tutor. Ave Caesar is a famous phrase from Edward III, a play now widely attributed to Shakespeare! Hence, the main linchpin of the case for young Shakespeare as an author and dramatist is very shaky indeed. It is possible that Shakespeare shared Marlowe s idealism, passion, and even free-thinking spirit and entered into a partnership with him for larger social, religious, or political ends. Thomas Cartwright and Job Throkmorton, the great Puritan opponents of Archbishop Whitgift, hailed from Warwickshire and visited Stratford. Young Will could have been inspired by

17 Shakespeare s Ghost 129 their impassioned sermons and speeches. Over the years, Shakespeare acquired a reputation as a tight spender and quarrelsome landlord and neighbor, but these need not detract from the possibility that he had his own youthful visionary bent. There is also a darker possibility for the genesis of their partnership. A Catholic will signed by his father, John Shakespeare, reportedly turned up hidden in the thatch roof of the family s cottage in Stratford in the eighteenth century. Knowledge of such clandestine religious practice by the anti- Catholic spymaster Walsingham in the 1580s or by the Cecils in the early 1590s, may have been used against Shakespeare. As a struggling young actor, Will could have been blackmailed into participating in the arrangement on condition that his recusant sympathies or those of his family not be exposed. His mother was also distantly related to Robert Southward, the Jesuit priest who was later martyred. Further, one of the cousins in his extended family, John Somerville, was arrested in 1583 as part of a Catholic plot to assassinate the queen. In the new book Theatre and Religion: Lancastrian Shakespeare, several leading Shakespearean scholars explore the extensive network of Catholic connections among the Shakespeare clan, Stratford, and the Jesuit underground. It is hypothesized that Will s introduction to the stage came through the Catholic Stanleys, including Ferdinando, patron of Lord Strange s Men (for whom Marlowe wrote). 22 Though well known for mentoring young earls, princesses, and other future leaders of the realm, Burghley was also a shrewd judge of character at the low end of the social scale, and young Will may have come to his attention. In 1585, a London official wrote a letter to Cecil referring to Nicholas Skeres as one of the Masterless men and Cutpurses whose practice is to robbe Gentelmen s Chambers and Artificers Shoppes in & about London. 23 Instead of turning Skeres over to the magistrates and hangman, Burghley apparently referred him to spymaster Walsingham because of his singular talents. In addition to his apparent participation in the Babington Plot, Skeres was one of the three men present at Marlowe s death in Deptford. Perhaps because of stalwart performances by men such as Skeres, the lord treasurer readily agreed to employ the lowly actor from Stratford in an intelligence caper of another variety. Although stridently anti-catholic, Burghley protected Protestant dissenters, Separatists, and freethinkers like Marlowe whenever possible. Robert Browne, who matriculated from Corpus Christi College in Cambridge about a decade before Marlowe, is a case in point. A member of a prominent family that was related to the Cecils, Browne was arrested and jailed on numerous occasions for publicly criticizing the Church, but each time he was released through Burghley s influence. In the early seventeenth

18 130 Hamlet century, his followers, known as Brownists, set sail for America and founded the Massachusetts Bay Colony, and Robert Browne came to be known as the father of Congregationalism. There is no known connection between Browne and Marlowe, but their ties to Corpus Christi College and Burghley warrant further investigation. (One of Marlowe s Canterbury neighbors, Robert Cushman, hired the Pilgrim vessel the Mayflower.) Given the enormous personal risks that playwrights like Kyd and Marlowe faced from orthodox theologians, it is likely that Shakespeare, at least in the beginning, did not know the real identity of the author whose works he passed off as his own. Venus and Adonis s dedication to Southampton as the first heir of my invention punningly suggests that the volume is the first to come out under an invented name. In addition to external ties, Venus and Adonis also shows internal evidence that it was compiled by Marlowe. Like Hero and Leander, it is a charming fable about why human love is doomed to fail. In each case, the poem enlarges and reshapes its classical source to embody the author s own philosophy and insights. Though presumably written before Venus and Adonis, Marlowe s poem alludes to its sequel in the opening lines ( Where Venus in her naked glory strove / To please the careless and disdainful eyes / Of proud Adonis [12 14]) and, like Shakespeare s, occasionally abbreviates Adonis s name to Adon in later references. In both poems, the beautiful youth is referred to as rose-cheeked, an epithet not found in the classical myths. ( Rosecheek d Adonis hied him to the chase [3] in Shakespeare and Rosecheeked Adonis, kept a solemn feast [93] in Marlowe.) In comparing Adonis to Narcissus, Shakespeare describes how the self-absorbed young man died to kiss his shadow in the brook (162) while Marlowe s Leander leapt into the water for a kiss / Of his own shadow (74 75). In Ovid s account of the original Greek myth, Narcissus drowns trying to embrace his own reflection in a pool, but there is no mention of him kissing his shadow. Curiously, Leander s face is likened to that of a woman in both Marlowe s poem and Shakespeare s Sonnet 20. The passages describing the heroines liquid pearl tears are also parallel, 24 and both poems include a description of a powerful steed that, disdaining to be controlled, breaks its reins, stamps its hooves, and exchanges restraint for freedom. 25 The maritime scenery in the two poems also appears to have been arranged by the same set designer, with numerous references to the sea, waves, coral, breaks, and other coastal images. Of course, both myths are originally set in the Mediterranean, but Venus and Adonis s description of pursuing the deadly boar o er the downs (677) suggests the southeast English coastline, not Crete, the island sacred to Venus. This reference

19 Shakespeare s Ghost 131 would more likely come to Marlowe s mind, who drew upon childhood memories of the cliffs of Dover, where his grandparents lived, than that of Shakespeare, who grew up in inland Warwickshire. (The same later holds true in Hamlet, whose dreadful summit of the cliff / That beetles o er his base into the sea [ ] is not found in Elsinore in Denmark, but in Kit s childhood haunts.) The predominant hue in each narrative poem is also the same. From the opening line of Venus and Adonis ( the sun with purple-color d face [1]) to the bed of flowers the lovers lie on ( blue-veined violets [125]) to the falling of the fruit ( the mellow plum [527]) that foreshadows their separation, the bloody injury that Adonis suffers, the purple tears, that his wound wept [1054]), and his final transmutation into an anemone ( A purple flow r sprung up [1168]), the Shakespearean poem clothes its starcrossed lovers in tragic indigo. In Marlowe s tale, the Morn... puts on her purple weeds ( ), oblations of wine from grapes outrung (140) are made at Venus s temple, the heroine s resplendent attire has a lining of purple silk (10), and Hero adorns her lover with purple ribbon wound (590), a pun on Adonis s wound and a presentiment of Leander s fate. As the day bathes both sets of lovers with its life-giving rays, so the fall of darkness mirrors their parting and separation. When they resign their office, and their light,... / Who bids them still consort with ugly night (1039, 1041) Shakespeare sings, while Marlowe s lyric refrain muses, But he the day s bright-bearing car prepared / And ran before as harbinger of light, / And with his flaring beams mocked ugly Night ( ). Finally, in each story, love s complaint is compared to decay in the natural world. Fair flowers that are not gather d in their prime / Rot, and consume themselves in little time ( ), Shakespeare sighs, while Marlowe draws the same moral in a field of grain: The richest corn dies if it be not reaped; / Beauty alone is lost, too warily kept ( ). The verses echo Marlowe s motto and Sonnet 73: Consum d with that which it was nourish d by. Compared to Shakespeare s later plays, which lift entire lines and themes from Marlowe, the theft of images and ideas in Venus and Adonis is relatively light. However, it has sufficiently vexed scholars so that they postulate that Shakespeare must have had access to a manuscript copy of Marlowe s work before writing his own. As A. L. Rowse states, The poems are full of echoes of each other, theme, arguments, phrases, whole passages. 26 Are these similarities harmless examples of literary poaching, coincidence, or prophecy? Occam s razor offers the simplest solution: the two poems were written by the same hand. As for Venus in the poem attributed to Shakespeare, the goddess may have been modeled, at least in part, on Mary Sidney, the Countess of

20 132 Hamlet Pembroke, one of the leading literary patrons of the Elizabethan era. Three years older than Kit and Will, she married the Earl of Pembroke when she was sixteen. Contemporary accounts suggest that the Pembrokes marriage, though it produced an heir, was largely one of convenience, with both the aging noble, previously married and more than thirty years older than his glamorous bride, and Mary pursuing their separate interests and dalliances. The countess, the sister of poet Sir Philip Sidney and an accomplished writer of blank verse in her own right, went on to complete her brother s unfinished work after his heroic death on the battlefield against the Spanish. Marlowe wrote a glowing tribute in Latin to Mary in the introduction of Amintae Gaudia, a posthumous book of poetry by his close friend, Thomas Watson, who died on September 26, Addressing the Most Illustrious Noble Lady, adorned with all gifts both of mind and body, Marlowe compares her to a goddess to whose immaculate embrace virtue, outraged by the assault of barbarism and ignorance, flieth for refuge. Could the haven possibly refer to her intervention on his behalf in Flushing, where he was detained by her brother, Robert, the governor, on charges of counterfeiting earlier in the year? Likening his own slender wealth to the seashore myrtle of Venus, he promises to invoke Mary s name as Mistress of the Muses in all of his own future works. Marlowe s Edward II and several anonymous plays attributed to him were performed by the Pembroke s Men, her husband s theatrical company. Mary s son, William Herbert, is the principal candidate for the mysterious Mr. W. H., to whom Shakespeare s Sonnets are dedicated. Edward Blount, the publisher of the First Folio, was Mary s trustee, and the first edition of Shakespeare s collected works is dedicated to William and his brother. This intricate web of connections with the countess and her family has led some critics to conclude that she and Marlowe may have been romantically attached. 27 Beside Mary Sidney and Southampton, Richard Field, the printer of Venus and Adonis and The Rape of Lucrece, may have been instrumental in Marlowe s literary return under Will s name. Field came from Stratford, as did Shakespeare, their two fathers were acquainted, and this connection is widely viewed by historians and critics as the missing link between Will s lost years and his move to London. Field served as an apprentice to Thomas Vautrollier, a Huguenot refugee printer. After the man died in 1587, Field married his widow and inherited the business, which included a monopoly on publishing Ovid s Metamorphoses, one of Marlowe s favorite books, in both English and Latin. He also published Holinshed, Plutarch, and many of the other sources that were used in the composition of the Marlovian and Shakespearean plays. Field also published a number of news pamphlets about religious strife in France that Kit used as background for The Massacre

21 Shakespeare s Ghost 133 at Paris. In the relatively small world of writers and publishers, Field and Marlowe were no doubt acquainted. Field may also have been a member of the School of Night and met Marlowe through Ralegh s circle. The title page of Venus and Adonis mentions that the book is Imprinted by Richard Field, and are to be sold at the signe of the white Greyhound in Paules Churchyard. In his testimony against Marlowe, Thomas Kyd implicated several other unnamed members of the informal academy, including some stationers in Paul s Churchyard. 28 In his statements extracted under torture, Kyd observed that they met under the sign of the White Greyhound. Since Field s books were sold at this alehouse, it is highly probable he was one of the stationers alluded to. He also published Sir Philip Sidney s works, tying him into Pembroke s circle, to which Kit was related through Lord Pembroke s acting company and Philip and Mary Sidney s other brother, Robert Sidney, the governor of Flushing. Less well known is the connection between Field and Burghley. Field printed Burghley s The Copie of a Letter sent out of England to Don Bernardin Mendoza, Spain s ambassador in France, along with other material related to the defeat of the Spanish Armada. The following year, Field wrote a dedicatory letter to Burghley in a book that he printed by George Puttenham entitled The Arte of English Poesie. It s possible that Field printed other documents for the Crown s chief councilor, but the Armada documents are the only ones catalogued in the British Museum. According to another Spanish emissary, Burghley secretly supplied poets with material for their plays. Evidently Feria [Spanish ambassador to England] was doing what he could to discredit Cecil with his mistress, explains Elizabethan historian Conyers Read. It was at this juncture that Feria protested against comedies in London which made mock of his royal master. He said that Cecil had supplied the authors of them with chief themes. 29 In William Cecil: The Power Behind Elizabeth, Alan Gordon Smith contends that Burghley orchestrated the publication of numerous encomiums of the new regime in its struggle to thwart Catholic conspiracies and establish a new patriotic English identity. Whole chapters might be filled concerning these official and semi-official publications: from Jewel s Apology to Foxe s Book of Martyrs. So important was this purely literary side of the revolution that, in the midst of his stupendous political labours, he would constantly take a personal hand in it himself. In addition to drafting his own works such as Declaration of the Queenes Proceedings since her Reign and Execution of Justice, Burghley had to rely, for the most part, on anonymous pens, for many of which he found regular employment. 30 Hence, as the center of the Crown s fiscal, diplomatic, and espionage web, the lord treas-

FROM THE RENAISSANCE TO THE PURITAN AGE

FROM THE RENAISSANCE TO THE PURITAN AGE FROM THE RENAISSANCE TO THE PURITAN AGE 1485-1660 HISTORICAL CONTEXT ENGLISH RENAISSANCE: even if filtered by the Reformation, it s a time of expansion of Knowledge, Philosophy, Science and Literature

More information

Hecate s Ban. Queen Elizabeth

Hecate s Ban. Queen Elizabeth Hecate s Ban Queen Elizabeth Thoughts black, hands apt, drugs fit, and time agreeing, Confederate season else no creature seeing, Thou mixture rank, of midnight weeds collected, With Hecate s ban thrice

More information

after Queen Elizabeth I ( ) ascended the throne, in the height of the English Renaissance. He found

after Queen Elizabeth I ( ) ascended the throne, in the height of the English Renaissance. He found Born: April 23, 1564 Stratford-upon-Avon, England Died: April 23, 1616 Stratford-upon-Avon, England English dramatist and poet The English playwright, poet, and actor William Shakespeare was a popular

More information

Oxford is one of the dedicatees of Spenser s Fairie Queene.

Oxford is one of the dedicatees of Spenser s Fairie Queene. (5) Period 1590-1594 Time Event Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford 1590 April 16 (6 in Julian calendar) : Death of Secretary of State Sir Francis Walsingham. Lord Burghley now holds both offices of Treasurer

More information

Why Study Shakespeare? Shakespeare is considered to be the greatest writer in the English language. His lines are more widely quoted than those of any

Why Study Shakespeare? Shakespeare is considered to be the greatest writer in the English language. His lines are more widely quoted than those of any Shakespeare English IV Pay attention and take notes!!! Why Study Shakespeare? Shakespeare is considered to be the greatest writer in the English language. His lines are more widely quoted than those of

More information

WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE: FOR ALL TIME

WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE: FOR ALL TIME WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE: FOR ALL TIME WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE (1564 1616) WHY STUDY SHAKESPEARE? People who have studied Shakespeare: Have a broader view of the world in general. Have little trouble in other literature

More information

English 9 Novel Unit. Look at the novel covers that follow. Jot down ideas you have about the novel based on the pictures.

English 9 Novel Unit. Look at the novel covers that follow. Jot down ideas you have about the novel based on the pictures. English 9 Novel Unit Look at the novel covers that follow. Jot down ideas you have about the novel based on the pictures. 1 2 cue anything said or done, on or off stage, that is followed by a specific

More information

Twelfth Night william SHAKESPEARE

Twelfth Night william SHAKESPEARE Novel Ties Twelfth Night william SHAKESPEARE A Study Guide Written By Carol Alexander Edited by Joyce Friedland and Rikki Kessler LEARNING LINKS P.O. Box 326 Cranbury New Jersey 08512 TABLE OF CONTENTS

More information

I was born in 1564 in Stratford-upon-Avon, England. I eventually moved to London, where I wrote over 38 plays and hundreds of poems. I died in 1616.

I was born in 1564 in Stratford-upon-Avon, England. I eventually moved to London, where I wrote over 38 plays and hundreds of poems. I died in 1616. I was born in 1564 in Stratford-upon-Avon, England. I eventually moved to London, where I wrote over 38 plays and hundreds of poems. I died in 1616. Comedies: All s Well That Ends Well As You Like It

More information

Background for William Shakespeare and Julius Caesar

Background for William Shakespeare and Julius Caesar Background for William Shakespeare and Julius Caesar The works of William Shakespeare are among the greatest achievements of the Renaissance. Developments in science and exploration during the Renaissance

More information

ON THE TRAIL OF THE TUDORS

ON THE TRAIL OF THE TUDORS ON THE TRAIL OF THE TUDORS The Ambient Tours Concept Who we are Ambient Tours is a division of Ambient Events Limited. The organisation provides a hands on, professional, cultural heritage activity planning

More information

The English Renaissance: Celebrating Humanity

The English Renaissance: Celebrating Humanity The English Renaissance: Celebrating Humanity 1485-1625 Life in Elizabethan and Jacobean England London expanded greatly as a city People moved in from rural areas and from other European countries Strict

More information

1551 John Shakespeare fined for having a dunghill in front of his house in Stratford-on-Avon. Birth of his sister Mary.

1551 John Shakespeare fined for having a dunghill in front of his house in Stratford-on-Avon. Birth of his sister Mary. (1) Period 1550-1574 Time Event Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford William Shakespeare of Stratford 1550 April 22 (or 12): Born at Castle Hedingham, County of Essex, of John de Vere, 16 th Earl of Oxford,

More information

1/8/2009. Shakespeare attended grammar school, but his formal education proceeded no further.

1/8/2009. Shakespeare attended grammar school, but his formal education proceeded no further. About the Man & Context for the Play English 621 December 2008 The most influential writer in all of English literature, William was born in 1564 to a successful middleclass glove-maker in Stratford-upon-

More information

History of English Language and Literature. Prof. Dr. Merin Simi Raj. Department of Humanities and Social Sciences

History of English Language and Literature. Prof. Dr. Merin Simi Raj. Department of Humanities and Social Sciences History of English Language and Literature Prof. Dr. Merin Simi Raj Department of Humanities and Social Sciences Indian Institute of Technology, Madras Module Number 01 Lecture Number 6 William Shakespeare:

More information

10/18/ About the Man & Context for the Play. English

10/18/ About the Man & Context for the Play. English About the Man & Context for the Play English 621 2010 Generously Liberated from Cliffsnotes and Sparknotes 10/18/2010 1 From Cliffsnotes and Sparknotes 10/18/2010 2 The most influential writer in all of

More information

I. William Shakespeare

I. William Shakespeare I. William Shakespeare Birth and Early Life April 23, 1564 Stratford-upon-Avon Parents: John Shakespeare and Mary Arden Young Adulthood Age 18 marries Anne Hathaway (26) 3 children (Susanna, and twins

More information

Shakespeare and the Elizabethean Age in England. Western Civilization II Marshall High School Mr. Cline Unit Three IA

Shakespeare and the Elizabethean Age in England. Western Civilization II Marshall High School Mr. Cline Unit Three IA Shakespeare and the Elizabethean Age in England Western Civilization II Marshall High School Mr. Cline Unit Three IA Elizabeth Comes to the Throne The Elizabethan Era of English history was a remarkable

More information

I. William Shakespeare

I. William Shakespeare I. William Shakespeare A. Birth and Early Life 1. April 23, 1564 2. Stratford-upon-Avon 3. Parents: John Shakespeare and Mary Arden B. Young Adulthood 1. Age 18 marries Anne Hathaway (26) 2. 3 children

More information

Independent Schools Examinations Board COMMON ENTRANCE EXAMINATION AT 13+ HISTORY. Specimen Paper. for first examination in Autumn 2013

Independent Schools Examinations Board COMMON ENTRANCE EXAMINATION AT 13+ HISTORY. Specimen Paper. for first examination in Autumn 2013 Independent Schools Examinations Board COMMON ENTRANCE EXAMINATION AT 13+ HISTORY Specimen Paper for first examination in Autumn 2013 Please read this information before the examination starts. This examination

More information

Hamlet: Why did you laugh then, when I said man delights not me? Rosencrantz:

Hamlet: Why did you laugh then, when I said man delights not me? Rosencrantz: Appendix 3a: The Authorship Question in Hamlet By Jonathan Star Copyright Jonathan Star, 2009 There is an allegory in Hamlet which may illumine one facet of the Shakespeare Authorship Question and help

More information

The Lame Storyteller by Peter Moore Hamburg, Germany: Verlag Uwe Laugwitz, 2009, xvi pages Reviewed by Warren Hope

The Lame Storyteller by Peter Moore Hamburg, Germany: Verlag Uwe Laugwitz, 2009, xvi pages Reviewed by Warren Hope The Lame Storyteller by Peter Moore Hamburg, Germany: Verlag Uwe Laugwitz, 2009, xvi + 345 pages Reviewed by Warren Hope! eter Moore s scholarly essays on Shakespeare are of two types. The first consist

More information

The Closure of the Playhouses in 1642

The Closure of the Playhouses in 1642 1 Dr Peter Sillitoe, ShaLT Collection Enhancement Report No. 22 for the V&A, Theatre and Performance Department (July 2013) The Closure of the Playhouses in 1642 On 6 th September 1642 the theatres were

More information

Humanities 3 IV. Skepticism and Self-Knowledge

Humanities 3 IV. Skepticism and Self-Knowledge Humanities 3 IV. Skepticism and Self-Knowledge Lecture 15 The Price of Liberty Outline Shakespeare s England Shakespeare and the Theatre Historical Background to Julius Caesar What s at Issue in the Play

More information

The mysteries surrounding Shakespeare

The mysteries surrounding Shakespeare The mysteries surrounding Shakespeare Océane Kerdavid et Florence Le Corre 3 A Summary Page 1 : Title Page 2 : Summary Page 3 : Introduction and biography Page 4 : assumptions Page 5 : argumentation and

More information

The English Drama. From the Beginnings to the Jacobean Period. (from the 12 th century to 1625)

The English Drama. From the Beginnings to the Jacobean Period. (from the 12 th century to 1625) The English Drama From the Beginnings to the Jacobean Period (from the 12 th century to 1625) The Drama in the 12 th Century and 13 th Century. The first forms of dramatic performance took place in the

More information

Novel Ties LEARNING LINKS P.O. Box 326 Cranbury New Jersey 08512

Novel Ties LEARNING LINKS P.O. Box 326 Cranbury New Jersey 08512 Novel Ties A Study Guide Written By Barbara Reeves Edited by Joyce Friedland and Rikki Kessler LEARNING LINKS P.O. Box 326 Cranbury New Jersey 08512 TABLE OF CONTENTS Synopsis...................................

More information

Moon s Day, September 10, 2012: Bardology 101

Moon s Day, September 10, 2012: Bardology 101 Moon s Day, September 10, 2012: Bardology 101 EQ: What do we know about Shakespeare and does it matter? Welcome! Gather Pencils, Paper, Wits! Opening Freewrite: Known Unknowns William Shakespeare: The

More information

Six Shakespeares in Search of an Author

Six Shakespeares in Search of an Author Six Shakespeares in Search of an Author Reviewed by Michael Dudley My Shakespeare: The Authorship Controversy: Experts Examine the Arguments for Bacon, Neville, Oxford, Marlowe, Mary Sidney, Shakspere,

More information

Humanities 3 IV. Skepticism and Self-Knowledge

Humanities 3 IV. Skepticism and Self-Knowledge Humanities 3 IV. Skepticism and Self-Knowledge Lecture 14 Gods, Kings and Tyrants Outline Montaigne s Morality Shakespeare 101 James I and the Divine Right of Kings Nature versus Convention Nature (phusis)

More information

So we ve gotten to know some of the famous writers in England, and. we ve even gotten to know their works a little bit. But what was going on

So we ve gotten to know some of the famous writers in England, and. we ve even gotten to know their works a little bit. But what was going on Chapter 20 - English Literature Restoration and the Eighteenth Century: Dryden, Pepys My observation [is] that most men that do thrive in the world forget to take pleasure during the time that they are

More information

Born on Stratford-on-Avon in 1564 & died in Married Anne Hathaway in 1582 & had 3 children

Born on Stratford-on-Avon in 1564 & died in Married Anne Hathaway in 1582 & had 3 children Video on His Life (2:01) Born on Stratford-on-Avon in 1564 & died in 1616 Married Anne Hathaway in 1582 & had 3 children From 1594 until his death, he was part of Lord Chamberlain s Men (a group of actors)

More information

Copyright 2009 by Richard Allan Wagner

Copyright 2009 by Richard Allan Wagner 1 Copyright 2009 by Richard Allan Wagner All Rights Reserved ISBN 978-1-4276-4325-4 2 nd Digitized ebook Edition Published by Richard Allan Wagner 2010 2 Contents Introduction 6 PART ONE ROYAL SECRETS

More information

Intermediate World History B. Unit 7: Changing Empires, Changing Ideas. Lesson 1: Elizabethan England and. North American Initiatives Pg.

Intermediate World History B. Unit 7: Changing Empires, Changing Ideas. Lesson 1: Elizabethan England and. North American Initiatives Pg. Intermediate World History B Unit 7: Changing Empires, Changing Ideas Lesson 1: Elizabethan England and North American Initiatives Pg. 273-289 Lesson 2: England: Civil War and Empire Pg. 291-307 Lesson

More information

Primary Source Analysis: The Thirty-nine Articles. The primary source that I decided to read is The Thirty-nine Articles, a really

Primary Source Analysis: The Thirty-nine Articles. The primary source that I decided to read is The Thirty-nine Articles, a really Student Name Date Primary Source Analysis: The Thirty-nine Articles The primary source that I decided to read is The Thirty-nine Articles, a really important religious document from the reign of Queen

More information

In 1649, in the English colony of Maryland, a law was issued

In 1649, in the English colony of Maryland, a law was issued Lord Baltimore An Act Concerning Religion (The Maryland Toleration Act) Issued in 1649; reprinted on AMDOCS: Documents for the Study of American History (Web site) 1 A seventeenth-century Maryland law

More information

Shakespeare paper: Macbeth

Shakespeare paper: Macbeth English test En KEY STAGE 3 LEVELS 4 7 2004 Shakespeare paper: Macbeth Please read this page, but do not open the booklet until your teacher tells you to start. Write your name, the name of your school

More information

The Merchant of Venice. William Shakespeare

The Merchant of Venice. William Shakespeare The Merchant of Venice William Shakespeare Unit Opener With your small group, go to one of the small posters around the classroom. Read the statement you find there, and decide whether you agree or disagree.

More information

Sir Walter Raleigh ( )

Sir Walter Raleigh ( ) Sir Walter Raleigh (1552 1618) ANOTHER famous Englishman who lived in the days of Queen Elizabeth was Sir Walter Raleigh. He was a soldier and statesman, a poet and historian but the most interesting fact

More information

SB=Student Book TE=Teacher s Edition WP=Workbook Plus RW=Reteaching Workbook 47

SB=Student Book TE=Teacher s Edition WP=Workbook Plus RW=Reteaching Workbook 47 A. READING / LITERATURE Content Standard Students in Wisconsin will read and respond to a wide range of writing to build an understanding of written materials, of themselves, and of others. Rationale Reading

More information

The Renaissance

The Renaissance The Renaissance 1485 1660 Renaissance Timeline 1517: Martin Luther begins Protestant Reformation 1558: Elizabeth I crowned 1588: English navy defeats Spanish Armada 1649: Charles I executed; English monarchy

More information

OVERVIEW OF THE BIBLE February 21, 2018 Job

OVERVIEW OF THE BIBLE February 21, 2018 Job Answers to the Questions (Lesson 14) OVERVIEW OF THE BIBLE February 21, 2018 Job Page 75 On the seventh day (of the second banquet) an intoxicated King Xerxes summoned Queen Vashti to display her beauty,

More information

BLANK PAGE. KS3/04/En/Levels 4 7/Macbeth 2

BLANK PAGE. KS3/04/En/Levels 4 7/Macbeth 2 BLANK PAGE KS3/04/En/Levels 4 7/Macbeth 2 Writing task You should spend about 30 minutes on this section. In Macbeth, Banquo warns Macbeth about the Witches influence. Help! You give advice in a magazine

More information

British Literature Lesson Objectives

British Literature Lesson Objectives British Literature Lesson Unit 1: THE MIDDLE AGES Introduction Discern the causes of political and ecclesiastical abuses during the Middle Ages that eventually led to the Reformation. Understand the historical

More information

Edexcel - British Depth Study: Early Elizabethan England

Edexcel - British Depth Study: Early Elizabethan England Edexcel - British Depth Study: Early Elizabethan England 1558-88 Key Question Approach Content covered Time (approx.) End Product / Assessment How was Overview with graph and statements Elizabeth s character

More information

English Literature of the Seventeenth 14th Lecture FINAL REVISION 1

English Literature of the Seventeenth 14th Lecture FINAL REVISION 1 English Literature of the Seventeenth 14th Lecture FINAL REVISION The Puritan Age (1600-1660) The Literature of the Seventeenth Century may be divided into two periods- The Puritan Age or the Age of Milton

More information

AQA - British Depth Study: Elizabethan England c

AQA - British Depth Study: Elizabethan England c AQA - British Depth Study: Elizabethan England c1568-1603 Key Question Approach Content covered Time (approx.) End Product / Assessment How was Elizabeth s character and reign shaped by events in her early

More information

2. My contention is that creativity now is as important in education as literacy, and we should treat it with the same status.

2. My contention is that creativity now is as important in education as literacy, and we should treat it with the same status. 1. The difference between school and life? In school, you re taught a lesson and then given a test. In life, you re given a test that teaches you a lesson. Tom Bodett 2. My contention is that creativity

More information

THE HISTORY OF BRITISH LITERATURE

THE HISTORY OF BRITISH LITERATURE THE HISTORY OF BRITISH LITERATURE ERA RELIGIOUS, POLITICAL, OR SOCIAL CONDITION LITERARY FIGURES AND THE LITERARY WORKS 1. Old English (Anglo-Saxon) 450-1050 BC - The literary works were influenced by

More information

The EMC Masterpiece Series, Literature and the Language Arts

The EMC Masterpiece Series, Literature and the Language Arts Correlation of The EMC Masterpiece Series, Literature and the Language Arts Grades 6-12, World Literature (2001 copyright) to the Massachusetts Learning Standards EMCParadigm Publishing 875 Montreal Way

More information

Richard III reburied 500 years after death

Richard III reburied 500 years after death World news resource 12th March 2015 Richard III reburied 500 years after death AT the end of March, Richard III, the last medieval king of England, was reburied at Leicester Cathedral. Getty For centuries,

More information

God and Some Fellows of Trinity: George Herbert. Evensong, 15 th November 2009, Trinity College Chapel.

God and Some Fellows of Trinity: George Herbert. Evensong, 15 th November 2009, Trinity College Chapel. God and Some Fellows of Trinity: George Herbert. Evensong, 15 th November 2009, Trinity College Chapel. 1 st lesson: 1 Chronicles 29: 10-15 2 nd reading: George Herbert Heaven from The Temple (1633). George

More information

Communion with God. Of Communion with God the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, Each Person Distinctly, in Love, Grace, and Consolation;

Communion with God. Of Communion with God the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, Each Person Distinctly, in Love, Grace, and Consolation; Communion with God Of Communion with God the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, Each Person Distinctly, in Love, Grace, and Consolation; or The Saints Fellowship with the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost Unfolded.

More information

Power as a key theme in King Lear

Power as a key theme in King Lear Power as a key theme in King Lear Dividing the Kingdom Why divide the kingdom? Subverting order? Creating rivalries? Loyalty, Alliances, and Rivalries ( no honor among thieves ) True loyalty (Cordelia,

More information

January Parish Life Survey. Saint Paul Parish Macomb, Illinois

January Parish Life Survey. Saint Paul Parish Macomb, Illinois January 2018 Parish Life Survey Saint Paul Parish Macomb, Illinois Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate Georgetown University Washington, DC Parish Life Survey Saint Paul Parish Macomb, Illinois

More information

Station 2: Medici Snapshot Biography

Station 2: Medici Snapshot Biography Station 2: Medici Snapshot Biography Station 3: Shakespeare Shakespeare's reputation as dramatist and poet actor is unique and he is considered by many to be the greatest playwright of all time, although

More information

Sir Henry Neville. Dates: c

Sir Henry Neville. Dates: c Sir Henry Neville Dates: c. 1562-1615 Background: * On his father s side, Neville was directly descended from Ralph de Neville 1st Earl of Westmoreland, who appears on stage in Henry IV and Henry V; Ralph

More information

E d i t o r i a l. *Editorial Works Cited on page 163.

E d i t o r i a l. *Editorial Works Cited on page 163. E d i t o r i a l OR close to three centuries, Shakespeare was ignored by the great English universities. As the respected Shakespeare scholar Frederick Boas tells us, during this time neither Oxford nor

More information

Playing Dead: An Updated Review of the Case for Christopher Marlowe

Playing Dead: An Updated Review of the Case for Christopher Marlowe Playing Dead: An Updated Review of the Case for Christopher Marlowe Peter Farey I n his recent book, Marlowe s Ghost, Daryl Pinksen tells of the 1953 Academy Awards, at which the film Roman Holiday won

More information

Why We Reject The Apocrypha

Why We Reject The Apocrypha Why We Reject The Apocrypha [p.361] Edward C. Unmack A one-volume commentary has recently been issued entitled A New Commentary on Holy Scripture, Including the Apocrypha. This, in effect, puts the Apocrypha

More information

NOTES Shakespeare s Career Why is his work so popular? Shakespeare s Works Elizabethan Beliefs The Chain of Being

NOTES Shakespeare s Career Why is his work so popular? Shakespeare s Works Elizabethan Beliefs The Chain of Being s birth is celebrated Died AT AGE Married Anne Hathaway in She was years older than he Had three children:, Hamnet, No record of his activity from Shakespeare s Career By - actor and playwright in 1594-

More information

HISTORY DEPARTMENT. Year 8 History Exam July Time allowed: 50 minutes. Instructions:

HISTORY DEPARTMENT. Year 8 History Exam July Time allowed: 50 minutes. Instructions: HISTORY DEPARTMENT Year 8 History Exam July 2017 NAME FORM For this paper you must have: A pen Time allowed: 50 minutes Instructions: Use black or blue ink or ball-point pen Fill in the box at the top

More information

(Refer Slide Time: 0:48)

(Refer Slide Time: 0:48) History of English Language and Literature Professor Merin Simi Raj Department of Humanities and Social Sciences Indian Institute of Technology Madras Lecture No 4b Elizabethan Age: English Drama before

More information

Intertextual Allusions in Hamlet. In 1966 the term intertextuality was coined by Julia Kristeva. Kristeva, a

Intertextual Allusions in Hamlet. In 1966 the term intertextuality was coined by Julia Kristeva. Kristeva, a Lainie Reinhart Intertextual Allusions in Hamlet In 1966 the term intertextuality was coined by Julia Kristeva. Kristeva, a poststructuralist critic, gave a definition of intertextuality as the shaping

More information

SAMPLE ESSAYS--FOR DISCUSSION

SAMPLE ESSAYS--FOR DISCUSSION packet toc file:///l:/public_html/101/packet_toc.htm /7/2007 5:01 PM 1 of 1 READING MATERIALS Finding a Subject 1 Show Not Tell Time 3 The Persuasive Principle 4 SAMPLE ESSAYS--FOR DISCUSSION Key Club

More information

THE SLANDERED WOMAN WHO FOUNDED THE TUDOR DYNASTY

THE SLANDERED WOMAN WHO FOUNDED THE TUDOR DYNASTY THE SLANDERED WOMAN WHO FOUNDED THE TUDOR DYNASTY Margaret Beaufort has been depicted in film and fiction as a tiger mother, maniacally plotting her son Henry Tudor s path to the throne, a religious fanatic

More information

Concept/Vocab Analysis

Concept/Vocab Analysis Concept/Vocab Analysis Literary Text: Measure for Measure by William Shakespeare. Edited by Jonathan Crewe and published by the Penguin Group Penguin Putnam Inc., New York: 2000. Organizational Patterns:

More information

(Terms in italics are explained elsewhere in the Glossary, terms underlined have their own articles)

(Terms in italics are explained elsewhere in the Glossary, terms underlined have their own articles) Glossary (Terms in italics are explained elsewhere in the Glossary, terms underlined have their own articles) Act of Succession (1534) An Act passed by the Reformation Parliament that made Henry VIII and

More information

The Discovery is not merely a chronicle of historical events or a treatise of Indian culture, it is a piece of literature conceived and executed by on

The Discovery is not merely a chronicle of historical events or a treatise of Indian culture, it is a piece of literature conceived and executed by on The Discovery is not merely a chronicle of historical events or a treatise of Indian culture, it is a piece of literature conceived and executed by one who is probably India s greatest writer of English

More information

julius caesar 1 Julius Caesar William Shakespeare Three Watson Irvine, CA Website:

julius caesar 1 Julius Caesar William Shakespeare Three Watson Irvine, CA Website: julius caesar 1 Julius Caesar William Shakespeare Three Watson Irvine, CA 92618-2767 Website: www.sdlback.com 2 Saddleback s Illustrated ClassicsTM Three Watson Irvine, CA 92618-2767 Website: www.sdlback.com

More information

Birds of a Feather Flock Together

Birds of a Feather Flock Together Lesson 18 - English Literature Shakespeare s Contemporaries Ben Jonson Too many times we let our dismal past get in the way of our shining future. What we don t realize is that no matter where we are in

More information

Warmup. What is art?

Warmup. What is art? 9/27 Warmup What is art? Greece Parthenon: classical Greek ideal of balance and proportion Socrates (470 399 BC) Socrates was an Athenian soldier and philosopher The world knows about Socrates because

More information

22 SESSION LifeWay

22 SESSION LifeWay 22 SESSION 2 The Point God Himself is my salvation. The Passage Psalm 27:1-6 The Bible Meets Life We depend on a lot of things to get us through the day. We depend on people to carry out their tasks. We

More information

Please read this page carefully, but do not open the question paper until told to do so.

Please read this page carefully, but do not open the question paper until told to do so. OXFORD UNIVERSITY HISTORY APTITUDE TEST Wednesday 31 October 2018 INSTRUCTIONS TO CANDIDATES Please read this page carefully, but do not open the question paper until told to do so. A separate 8-page answer

More information

Contents. 1. A Carpenter Named Joseph Whose Child Is This? Raising a Child Not Your Own The Journey to Bethlehem...

Contents. 1. A Carpenter Named Joseph Whose Child Is This? Raising a Child Not Your Own The Journey to Bethlehem... Contents 1. A Carpenter Named Joseph.... 9 2. Whose Child Is This?... 35 3. Raising a Child Not Your Own... 59 4. The Journey to Bethlehem... 85 The Rest of the Story... 113 R Notes.... 139 Acknowledgments....

More information

1. Read, view, listen to, and evaluate written, visual, and oral communications. (CA 2-3, 5)

1. Read, view, listen to, and evaluate written, visual, and oral communications. (CA 2-3, 5) (Grade 6) I. Gather, Analyze and Apply Information and Ideas What All Students Should Know: By the end of grade 8, all students should know how to 1. Read, view, listen to, and evaluate written, visual,

More information

I Am a Child of the King

I Am a Child of the King 2 I Am a Child of the King What comes to mind when you hear the word royalty? QUESTION 1 #BSFLmore BIBLE STUDIES FOR LIFE 85 THE POINT Jesus makes us full members of His family. THE BIBLE MEETS LIFE Most

More information

PAGE(S) WHERE TAUGHT (If submission is not text, cite appropriate resource(s))

PAGE(S) WHERE TAUGHT (If submission is not text, cite appropriate resource(s)) Prentice Hall Literature Timeless Voices, Timeless Themes Copper Level 2005 District of Columbia Public Schools, English Language Arts Standards (Grade 6) STRAND 1: LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT Grades 6-12: Students

More information

During Shakespeare s day, many people believed in the concept of a natural and cosmic

During Shakespeare s day, many people believed in the concept of a natural and cosmic LaBarre 1 1) The first couple paragraphs here are disorienting. This is partly because I don t see a problem articulated that s motivating your inquiry. Instead, I see a fairly well-reasoned argument which

More information

James A. Selby Discovering the Skills of Writing

James A. Selby Discovering the Skills of Writing Composition Classical James A. Selby Encomium, INvective, & Comparison Stages Discovering the Skills of Writing Teacher Guide Contents Classical Composition: Encomium, Invective, and Comparison Stages

More information

My dear people of God:

My dear people of God: EIGHTH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME-C March 3, 2019 First Reading Sirach 27:4-7 Responsorial Psalm Psalm 92 Second Reading 1 Corinthians 15:54-58 Gospel Luke 6: 39-45 My dear people of God: As we approach Lent

More information

Victorian era British writer, novelist, poet. Poet Laureate of the UK during much of Queen Victoria's reign. Remains one of the most popular poets in

Victorian era British writer, novelist, poet. Poet Laureate of the UK during much of Queen Victoria's reign. Remains one of the most popular poets in Victorian era British writer, novelist, poet. Poet Laureate of the UK during much of Queen Victoria's reign. Remains one of the most popular poets in the English language. Works include, Crossing The Bar,

More information

Germany and the Reformation: Religion and Politics

Germany and the Reformation: Religion and Politics Week 12 Chapter 15 (p.486-523) The Age of Religious Wars and European Expansion Politics, Religion, and War Discovery, Reconnaissance, and Expansion Later Explorers Changing Attitudes Literature and Art

More information

Palmview High School

Palmview High School Palmview High School 2017 Required Summer Reading 11 th Grade AP English Language and Composition Dual Enrollment English The summer reading project for the Palmview High School English AP/DE program will

More information

Was There a Secret Gospel of Mark?

Was There a Secret Gospel of Mark? 7.29 Was There a Secret Gospel of Mark? One of the most intriguing episodes in New Testament scholarship concerns the reputed discovery of an alternative version of Mark s Gospel indeed, an uncensored

More information

The Enlightenment- Notable French Philosophers

The Enlightenment- Notable French Philosophers The Enlightenment- Notable French Philosophers Renee Descartes Charles-Louis de Secondat, Baron de La Brède et de Montesquieu François-Marie Arouet AKA Voltaire Learning Objectives Identify Descartes and

More information

Act III, Scene ii takes place shortly after in the Palace. Lady Macbeth and Macbeth are having a discussion.

Act III, Scene ii takes place shortly after in the Palace. Lady Macbeth and Macbeth are having a discussion. Macbeth Act III Act III, Scene i takes place in the palace. Banquo is alone. He is thinking about how the witches prophecies have come true, and he believes that Macbeth has had a part in it. Macbeth enters

More information

Esther. Women of the Old Testament part 5. June 5, 2016

Esther. Women of the Old Testament part 5. June 5, 2016 PROVIDENCE DAY 1: An overview of the book of Esther Esther Women of the Old Testament part 5 June 5, 2016 1. Setting: City of Susa, the capital of Persia, when Persia was the dominant world power. God

More information

TALES FROM SHAKESPEARE Retold by Alfred Lee Published by Preiss Murphy Website:

TALES FROM SHAKESPEARE Retold by Alfred Lee Published by Preiss Murphy   Website: TALES FROM SHAKESPEARE Retold by Alfred Lee Published by Preiss Murphy E-mail: info@preissmurphy.com Website: www.preissmurphy.com Copyright 2012 Preiss Murphy Exclusively distributed by Alex Book Centre

More information

Christopher Columbus: Hero or Villain? U.S. History 8: DBQ #1. Introduction

Christopher Columbus: Hero or Villain? U.S. History 8: DBQ #1. Introduction Christopher Columbus: Hero or Villain? U.S. History 8: DBQ #1 Introduction Recent historical interpretations of Christopher Columbus' voyages to the New World have created controversy surrounding the national

More information

4A Middle Ages Syllabus

4A Middle Ages Syllabus 4A Middle Ages Syllabus Standards Traces the development of British fiction through various literary periods (ie, Anglo-Saxon, Medieval, Renaissance, Romantic, etc. Identifies and analyzes patterns of

More information

Geoffrey Chaucer and The Canterbury Tales

Geoffrey Chaucer and The Canterbury Tales Geoffrey Chaucer and The Canterbury Tales Born c. 1340 Son of a prosperous wine merchant Early Life Father received an inheritance In mid teens, he was placed in the service of Prince Lionel, son of King

More information

Accelerated English II Summer reading: Due August 5, 2016*

Accelerated English II Summer reading: Due August 5, 2016* Accelerated English II Summer reading: Due August 5, 2016* EVEN FOR STUDENTS WHO HAVE ACCELERATED ENGLISH SCHEDULED FOR THE SPRING OF 2016 THERE ARE 2 SEPARATE ASSIGNMENTS (ONE FOR ANIMAL FARM AND ONE

More information

HAMLET. From Beautiful Stories from Shakespeare. By E. Nesbit

HAMLET. From Beautiful Stories from Shakespeare. By E. Nesbit HAMLET From Beautiful Stories from Shakespeare By E. Nesbit Hamlet was the only son of the King of Denmark. He loved his father and mother dearly--and was happy in the love of a sweet lady named Ophelia.

More information

The Right Time. a sermon by. Dr. William P. Wood. First Presbyterian Church Charlotte, North Carolina. November 25, 2007

The Right Time. a sermon by. Dr. William P. Wood. First Presbyterian Church Charlotte, North Carolina. November 25, 2007 The Right Time a sermon by Dr. William P. Wood First Presbyterian Church Charlotte, North Carolina November 25, 2007 Text: For everything there is a season, and a time for every matter under heaven (Ecclesiastes

More information

Taxonomy Question. Knowledge: Who painted the School of Athens? Application How would the printing press effect the spread or

Taxonomy Question. Knowledge: Who painted the School of Athens? Application How would the printing press effect the spread or Taxonomy Question Knowledge: Who painted the School of Athens? Comprehension: Describe humanism. Application How would the printing press effect the spread or information? Analysis: What about Marlowe's

More information

George Chakravarthi Thirteen

George Chakravarthi Thirteen FREE Exhibition Guide. Please replace after use. George Chakravarthi Thirteen 20 March to 21 June 2014 Evoking death, drama and identity, George Chakravarthi re-imagines thirteen Shakespearean characters

More information

The Divided Line from The Republic, Book VII by Plato (~380 BC) translated by G.M.A. Grube (1974), revised by C.D.C. Reeve (1992)

The Divided Line from The Republic, Book VII by Plato (~380 BC) translated by G.M.A. Grube (1974), revised by C.D.C. Reeve (1992) The Divided Line from The Republic, Book VII by Plato (~380 BC) translated by G.M.A. Grube (1974), revised by C.D.C. Reeve (1992) Socrates: You ve often heard it said that the form of the good is the most

More information

WHAT IS THE APOCRYPHA?

WHAT IS THE APOCRYPHA? WHAT IS THE APOCRYPHA? When were the Apocryphal books written? Page! 1 of! 7 The Apocryphal Books: These books derive their name from a Greek word, apokruphos which means "hidden." They are so called because

More information

SOVEREIGN MILITARY ORDER OF MALTA

SOVEREIGN MILITARY ORDER OF MALTA SOVEREIGN MILITARY ORDER OF MALTA Intervention of Professor Dr. Mark J. Wolff, B.A., J.D., LL.M 1 Knight of Magistral Grace of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta Observer Head of Delegation of the Sovereign

More information