ShakespearePenguin Books, 1972 - 272 pagina's Like Burgess's early novel, Nothing Like the Sun: A Story of Shakespeare's Love-Life, this equally delightful factual treatment of what we know of the Bard combines Burgess's stimulating erudition and his well-informed imagination. The result is at once a speculative biography, a theatrical history, and a re-creation of the Elizabethan age. Whether a vivid retracing of the evolution Elizabethan theater, a bravura reconstruction of the first performance of Hamlet, an infiltration of the intricacies of the court of the Virgin Queen, or an elegy on the era's end with the distrastrous Essex Rebellion, Burgess sets the stage for England's most glorious time and turns the spotlight on the figure of William Shakespeare. Copyright © Libri GmbH. All rights reserved. |
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Pagina 33
... seen as an aspect of their realism . The sooner children became adults the better , and one could make a start by dressing them like adults : the notion that children should dress like children is a very new one . It was left to the ...
... seen as an aspect of their realism . The sooner children became adults the better , and one could make a start by dressing them like adults : the notion that children should dress like children is a very new one . It was left to the ...
Pagina 163
... seen that the future of the drama might lie less with the popular audiences - groundlings who chewed sausages and garlic and booed and spat – than with those cultivated gentlemen who could appre- ciate a well - turned epigram , a ...
... seen that the future of the drama might lie less with the popular audiences - groundlings who chewed sausages and garlic and booed and spat – than with those cultivated gentlemen who could appre- ciate a well - turned epigram , a ...
Pagina 186
... seen the beginning of disease in his own ? Mere artists must observe great events , not participate in them . Yet sometimes the work of art itself will be forced , by the makers of events , into the arena of action . This was now to ...
... seen the beginning of disease in his own ? Mere artists must observe great events , not participate in them . Yet sometimes the work of art itself will be forced , by the makers of events , into the arena of action . This was now to ...
Inhoudsopgave
Foreword page | 11 |
The Shakespeare coat of arms reverse of frontispiece | 12 |
2 | 27 |
Copyright | |
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acting actor Admiral's Men Alleyn Anne Arden audience Ben Jonson Burbage called Catholic character Church comedy Court daughter dead death died drama dramatist Earl of Essex Elizabeth Elizabethan England English eyes Falstaff father France Globe glory Hamlet hath Henry honour humour James John Shakespeare Jonson Judith Kemp King knew Lady later Latin learning living London Lord Chamberlain's Lord Chamberlain's Men Lord Strange's Men lust lyrical Marlowe Marlowe's marriage married masque Menaechmus mistress moral night performed perhaps plague play players playhouses playwright poem poet pounds probably Queen Queen's Men reign Richard Richard II Rose scene seems Senecan Shake Shottery sonnet Southampton Spain speare speech stage Stratford Susanna Tamburlaine theatre Thomas thou Titus Andronicus tragedy Venus and Adonis Warwickshire wife Will's William Shakespeare words write wrote young