Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- CHAPTER I ENGLAND AND THE ENGLISH
- PART I SHAKESPEARE'S YOUTH, STRATFORD 1564–1586
- PART II SHAKESPEARE IN LONDON 1586–1608
- PART III SHAKESPEARE'S LAST YEARS, STRATFORD 1608–1616
- CONCLUSION: AN ELIZABETHAN DAY
- GLOSSARY AND NOTES
- INDEX OF AUTHORS
- Plate section
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- CHAPTER I ENGLAND AND THE ENGLISH
- PART I SHAKESPEARE'S YOUTH, STRATFORD 1564–1586
- PART II SHAKESPEARE IN LONDON 1586–1608
- PART III SHAKESPEARE'S LAST YEARS, STRATFORD 1608–1616
- CONCLUSION: AN ELIZABETHAN DAY
- GLOSSARY AND NOTES
- INDEX OF AUTHORS
- Plate section
Summary
A reference to the table of contents will acquaint the reader with the plan of this book. That meagre framework of facts which we call the life of Shakespeare has been made its basis, and the various extracts are so arranged as to illustrate the social atmosphere which surrounded our greatest poet at different periods of his career. The country lay at his door in infancy, with its shepherds and milkmaids, its witches and fairies. Stratford had its grammar-school, which he probably attended, and, though he did not proceed to college nor as far as we know ever leave the kingdom, sections on the university and travel have been added to complete the picture of an average Elizabethan gentleman's education. With the youth of twenty-two we then journey to London, noting on our way the vileness of the roads and the comfort of the inns, we see the chief sights of the capital, we stand amazed at its turbulence and gaiety, we catch glimpses of the temptations that beckoned the future dramatist to enter that ‘primrose way to the everlasting bonfire’ down which his predecessors Marlowe and Greene had wandered to their undoing. Next we pass to the conditions which surrounded Shakespeare as author, actor and playwright, concluding this stage of our itinerary with a visit to the court, which was the constant supporter of the theatre against a puritanical civic government and the true centre, though not always the kindly patron, of all literary activity.
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- Information
- Life in Shakespeare's EnglandA Book of Elizabethan Prose, pp. vii - xPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1911