How long has shakespeare been dead
Shakespeare Online. References Mitchell, C. The Shakespeare Circle. Birmingham: Cornish Brothers, Picard, Liza. Elizabeth's London. London: Phoenix Press, Shakespeare was the only one who married. In an age that puts little store in records, this is practically all we know about his brothers and sisters. His grasp of both geography and history was finite.
No one seems to have informed him that Milan and Verona are not seaports. Et cetera. At the age of 18, Mr. The record notes, sans judgment, that she was also several months pregnant when they married.
Did she entrap him? Did he climb into the trap and calmly fasten its sweet, warm metal jaws around him? The world will never know. Nor is anyone entirely sure what Mr. Shakespeare was doing from to , other than, at some point, making his way to London, where his vaulting ambition manifested itself through acting in and writing plays.
According to the images that survive of him, Mr. Shakespeare was on the balding side and looked surprisingly good with an earring. As a shareholder, Mr.
The king loved his men. Before he died, Mr. His audience extended beyond the bounds of Albion. To no small amount of bafflement, one might wager. In all, Mr. Shakespeare wrote between 37 and 40 plays, depending on whom you ask.
Some he wrote in collaboration. Only 18 of Mr. We are prescient that way. Nor did he hesitate to alter those plots. More than 2, received their first recorded use in his work, including barefaced, assassination, excellent, frugal, eyeball, auspicious, swagger, zany, summit, moonbeam, obscene, cold-blooded, hot-blooded, epileptic, fashionable, gossip, lonely, grovel, torture, manager, well-read, buzzer and rant.
It should be added that Mr. Shakespeare was equally, if not more, revered in his lifetime for his nontheatrical poetry. Lovers of verse particularly revere Mr. Shakespeare never subscribed to the penniless-artist school and hoarded his coins as assiduously as Shylock, twice defaulting on fairly measly tax payments.
Across the country there is more — much more — taking place to celebrate a writer whose influence pops up in unexpected places. Tourism body Visit London is promoting ShakeSpeak, a smartphone app that allows users to text like the Bard by auto-completing some of his famous phrases.
The district where the Bard once worked is enthusiastically embracing his legacy. These days the riverside promenade throngs with tourists. Borough Market , which has stood in Bankside for 1, years, is a magnet for foodies and has helped spur a British food revival.
Traces of Shakespeare can be found not just at the Globe but at the even earlier Rose Playhouse , built in
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