A History of English Literature

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

Contents


William Shakespeare 108
Shakespeare’s life 108
The plays preserved 111
Luck and fame 112
The drama 112
The commercial theatre 112
Predecessors 114
Christopher Marlowe 114
The order of the plays 116
Histories 117
Richard II 118
Henry IV 119
Henry V 120
Comedy 121
A Midsummer Night’s
Dream 122
Twelfth Night 125
The poems 126
Tr agedy 128
Hamlet 129
King Lear 130
Macbe th 132
Late Romances 133
The Te mpest 134
Conclusion 136
Shakespeare’s
achievement 136
His supposed point of
view 136
Ben Jonson 136
The Alchemist 138
Volpone 138


Further reading 138


108


Overview


Shakespeare’s family, early marriage, obscurity. First mentioned as a London
player and playwright at the age of 28, he came in on the crest of a wave of
new poetic drama. Kyd and Marlowe died, leaving the stage to him.
He averaged two plays a year for twenty years: first comedy and history (a form
he perfected), then tragedy, and finally romance. Half of his plays survive only
in the First Folio, introduced by his successor, Jonson.

nWilliam Shakespeare


Shakespeare’s life

William Shakespeare was born in 1564 at Stratford, a market town on the river
Avon in Warwickshire. He was the eldest son and the third of eight children of John
Shakespeare, a glover, and Mary Arden, a landowner’s daughter. In 1568 John was
bailiff (mayor) of Stratford.
Education at Stratford school was based on Latin grammar, rhetoric and compo-
sition; to speak English was forbidden in the upper forms. At church, Holy Trinity,
which William attended by law with his father, he would also have learned much. At
home there were three brothers and two sisters (three other sisters died as children),
and around the home there were river-meadows, orchards and parks. He saw the
public life of the town, too, although his father’s part in this declined. Strolling play-
ers visited Stratford, and at nearby Coventry there was every June a performance of
the cycle of Mystery plays on the feast of Corpus Christi (see p. 66).
William’s parents, like their Warwickshire contemporaries, were brought up as
Catholics. It used to be taught that the English Reformation arose for reasons of
co nscience but historians now see it as having been imposed from above for reasons
of state (see p. 81). The poet’s mother, Mary Arden, came from a noted Catholic
family; a cousin was hanged, drawn and quartered in 1583. John was the Council’s
chief officer when William went to school, but when William left school, John had
not attended Stratford’s Common Council for three years. He was reported to the
authorities as a ‘recusant’ (from Latin recusare, to refuse): one who refused to attend

Shakespeare and the

Drama

4


CHAPTER

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