Sunday, December 31, 2006


For more information about Shakespeare, please visit: http://www.shakespeare-macbeth.com


 


Contest Crazy 8/15
Hello Everyone! On this Day August 15th....... 1057: In events later used by William Shakespeare in one of his greatest tragedies, the Scottish king Macbeth is killed by Malcolm Canmore, the son of King Duncan I, whom Macbeth had murdered 17 years before. 1534: Saint Ignatius of Loyola founds the Jesuits, a Roman Catholic order of men, in Paris, France. 1935: American humorist Will Rogers and aviator Wiley Post are killed when their plane crashes in Alaska. 1939: The film version of The Wizard of Oz, starring Judy Garland as Dorothy, ...

Rose has another winner brewing
"Double, double, toil and trouble; Fire, burn; and, cauldron, bubble.'' (From Macbeth, by William Shakespeare) As Russ Rose huddles over his pot in his cave in Rec Hall, he continues to brew up his latest concoction.

Yahoo! News - 101 ways to massacre Shakespeare (Reuters)
Reuters - Bouncy Castle Hamlet, Macbeth with a Sinatra soundtrack, Shakespeare for Breakfast with free coffee and croissants.


Rose has another winner brewing
"Double, double, toil and trouble; Fire, burn; and, cauldron, bubble.'' (From Macbeth, by William Shakespeare) As Russ Rose huddles over his pot in his cave in Rec Hall, he continues to brew up his latest concoction.

Comment by Dave Nalle
Shouldn't the name be in public domain since it originates in Scandinavian mythology and is then repeated in Shakespeare's MacBeth? Dave

untitled
The last word on Tom Cruise: "It is a tale Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury; Signifying nothing." ATTRIBUTION: William Shakespeare Macbeth, in Macbeth, act 5, sc. 5.

Macbeth (MA15+) - Released Thu, 21 Sep 2006
Director, Geoffrey Wright's contemporary retelling of Shakespeare's classic tale is set in the ganglands of Melbourne. Starring: Sam Worthington, Victoria Hill, Lachy Hulme, Gary Sweet, Steve Bastoni

Saturday, December 30, 2006

Current News and events related to Shakespeare:
Macbeth [videorecording] / by William Shakespeare ; a BBC Television production in association with Time-Life Television ; produced by Shaun Sutton ; directed by Jack Gold.
New York : Ambrose Video Pub., [2000 or 2001] PR 2823 A23 2000 PR 2823 A23 2000 (MEDIA)

Edinburgh Fringe: 101 ways to massacre Shakespeare
EDINBURGH (Reuters) - Bouncy Castle Hamlet, Macbeth with a Sinatra soundtrack, Shakespeare for Breakfast with free coffee and croissants.

Lusting for more wiki action
Here's a topic that promises to spur some online conversations: Nancy Pearl and her Book Lust empire is one of the newest wiki sites on Wetpaint. The beloved Seattle librarian is the subject of what Seattle start-up Wetpaint calls "a community for people who love books." The wiki is apparently a team effort by Wetpaint and Pearl's publisher, Sasquatch Books, the Puget Sound Business Journal reports. I like the feature that lets you "post a question for Nancy." So what does she think it takes to be well-read? A large dose of Shakespeare (King Lear, Hamlet, or MacBeth), some Herman Melville (Moby Dick), the poems of Walt Whitman, The Apology by Plato, and Oedipus Rex by Sophocles. For a different kind of book lover, there's an entire wiki devoted to the DaVinci Code.


101 ways to massacre The Bard (Reuters)
EDINBURGH (Reuters) - Bouncy Castle Hamlet, Macbeth with a Sinatra soundtrack, Shakespeare for Breakfast with free coffee and croissants.

Yahoo! News - 101 ways to massacre The Bard (Reuters)
Reuters - Bouncy Castle Hamlet, Macbeth with a Sinatra soundtrack, Shakespeare for Breakfast with free coffee and croissants.

Special session may lay groundwork for January
A twist of Shakespeare's King Macbeth oration offers the best description of the activity surrounding tax reform in the upcoming special session: "a tale

Macbeth [videorecording] / by William Shakespeare ; a BBC Television production in association with Time-Life Television ; produced by Shaun Sutton ; directed by Jack Gold.
New York : Ambrose Video Pub., [2000 or 2001] PR 2823 A23 2000 PR 2823 A23 2000 (MEDIA)

Friday, December 29, 2006


Up to date information about Shakespeare:


 


Rose has another winner brewing
"Double, double, toil and trouble; Fire, burn; and, cauldron, bubble.'' (From Macbeth, by William Shakespeare) As Russ Rose huddles over his pot in his cave in Rec Hall, he continues to brew up his latest concoction.

Talking Film: Macbeth - Shakespeare in the 'hood (VIC)
WHEN 19 September WHERE ACMI Cinemas, Melbourne Preview screening of Geoffrey Wright's Macbeth, followed by discussion with Macbeth director Geoffrey Wright & producer Jenni Tosi and special guest Marion Potts, Associate Director 2006 from the Bell Shakespeare company. [more...]

Macbeth auditions to be held at USD
The University of South Dakota Department of Theatre will hold auditions for Macbeth, Shakespeare's towering classic, from 7 to 10 p.m. Aug.


101 ways to massacre Shakespeare (Reuters)
Reuters - Bouncy Castle Hamlet, Macbeth with a Sinatra soundtrack, Shakespeare for Breakfast with free coffee and croissants.

101 ways to massacre Shakespeare (Reuters)
EDINBURGH (Reuters) - Bouncy Castle Hamlet, Macbeth with a Sinatra soundtrack, Shakespeare for Breakfast with free coffee and croissants.

Complete Macbeth Interactive 1.10
Macbeth taught scene by scene, with dramatic audio readings, geography, movies, questions, immediate feedback, and teacher-friendly scoring, with a focus on language devices and Shakespeare's historical sources. This program contains a user-friendly and intuitive navigation with pleasing graphical interfaces and challenging questions on the text. Involves three of the five senses in a unique approach to teaching the darkest of Shakespeare's works. Created, with all the intelligences in mind, for secondary students.Technorati Tags: macbeth, shakespeare, language arts, AP, teacher tools, lab software, education.Refer:http://www.popsoftlib.com/Home_Education/Teaching_Tools/Complete_Macbeth_Interactive/info-44444.html

Special session may lay groundwork for January
Pignanelli: A twist of Shakespeare's King Macbeth oration offers the best description of the activity surrounding tax reform in the upcoming special session: "a tale ... full of sound and fury, signif...

Thursday, December 28, 2006


Updated News on Shakespeare:


 


Yahoo! News - 101 ways to massacre The Bard (Reuters)
Reuters - Bouncy Castle Hamlet, Macbeth with a Sinatra soundtrack, Shakespeare for Breakfast with free coffee and croissants.

101 ways to massacre Shakespeare (Reuters)
Reuters - Bouncy Castle Hamlet, Macbeth with a Sinatra soundtrack, Shakespeare for Breakfast with free coffee and croissants.

Lusting for more wiki action
Here's a topic that promises to spur some online conversations: Nancy Pearl and her Book Lust empire is one of the newest wiki sites on Wetpaint. The beloved Seattle librarian is the subject of what Seattle start-up Wetpaint calls "a community for people who love books." The wiki is apparently a team effort by Wetpaint and Pearl's publisher, Sasquatch Books, the Puget Sound Business Journal reports. I like the feature that lets you "post a question for Nancy." So what does she think it takes to be well-read? A large dose of Shakespeare (King Lear, Hamlet, or MacBeth), some Herman Melville (Moby Dick), the poems of Walt Whitman, The Apology by Plato, and Oedipus Rex by Sophocles. For a different kind of book lover, there's an entire wiki devoted to the DaVinci Code.


Wednesday, December 27, 2006


Term Paper on Shakespeare 's Sonnets
Author: Michael Cooper

Shakespeare's Sonnets: Time and Decay


Eventually, time and decay effect everything. Shakespeare uses this theme in many of his sonnets. The sonnets give no hint of an afterlife and express that nothing survives time. Shakespeare used numerous methods to depict this theme including personification, metaphors and similes. Even though Shakespeare says that time destroys everything, he also addresses how to �defeat� time to a degree. One way to �defeat� time is to marry and have children. A person�s offspring will in some measure carry him or her on throughout time. Shakespeare also believed that poetry is immortal and those who are featured in them will be also. He offers this immortality to his friend and the dark lady. This paper will examine the theme of time and decay in sonnets 15, 18, and 73.


In sonnet 15, Shakespeare writes about the changes that people go through and maturity. In it the sonnet states that perfection only lasts for a little time. He writes, �When I consider every thing that grows holds in perfection but a little moment�� (lines 1 �2). He compares men to plants and says that they display themselves at the height of their perfection and then are slowly forgotten. In other words life is like a flower that blooms. It bursts out with beauty and then time and decay cause it to slowly wither away to old age and death. In the last couplet of the sonnet, Shakespeare gives his friend a way to win the war with time and decay and implant his beauty again. The way offers this is to be featured in his poetry. What better way to �live on� then to be read about for centuries?


The cycle of the year is used to describe life in sonnet 18. Spring equals youth, summer equals maturity and perfection, fall equals middle age and winter equals old age. Shakespeare writes �Shall I compare thee to a summer�s day? Thou art more lovely and more temperate�And summer�s lease hath all too short a date�� (lines 1,2 and 4). He is saying to his friend that he is in the height of his perfection right now, but it will not last for very long. Again towards the end of the sonnet he tells him that he shall conquer time and decay by being immortal in his poetry �But thy eternal summer shall not fade�When in eternal lines to time thou grow�st� (lines 9 and 12).


Sonnet 73 is a little different because Shakespeare is making a plea to the dark lady because their love is dying. The whole sonnet has indications of fall such as �That time of year thou mayst in me behold when yellow leaves, or none, or few, do hang�� (lines 1 and 2). This is making use of the cycle of the year again and he is expressing that he is in middle age and soon approaching twilight or death



�In me thou seest the twilight of such a day


As after sunset fadeth in the west;


Which by and by black night doth take away,


Death�s second self that seals up all in rest.� (Lines 5-8)



He is saying that he is past his moment of perfection and that death will come soon. Time and decay have started to affect him. In the last couplet of the sonnet he states that the dark lady should value him more because he won�t be here for long, instead of forgetting him because he is no longer in his moment of perfection.


Shakespeare used the theme of time and decay frequently in his sonnets. He states that everything has a brief moment of perfection, which is it�s maturity, and then slowly withers and dies away. He uses many different ways to get this point across including the comparison of life to a year and a day. Shakespeare also tells of how time and decay might be �defeated�. He gives this �immortality to his friend and the dark lady through the written word.


Dr. Mike Cooper provides term paper assistance to college students at http://www.termpaperadvisor.com and http://www.safe-papers.com. Above is a term paper example from his website.


Dr. Mike Copper provides term paper, essay, and research assistance to college and university students.


For more information about Shakespeare, please visit: http://www.shakespeare-macbeth.com


 


Yahoo! News - 101 ways to massacre Shakespeare (Reuters)
Reuters - Bouncy Castle Hamlet, Macbeth with a Sinatra soundtrack, Shakespeare for Breakfast with free coffee and croissants.

Macbeth
SYDNEY -- Baz Luhrmann set the bar high for maverick adaptations of Shakespeare, but fellow Aussie director Geoffrey Wright takes a game leap at it with his postmodern rendering of "Macbeth."...

It's a new season, from 'Macbeth' to 'Bye Bye Birdie'
Speaking of Shakespeare, here's what the Seattle Shakespeare Company has lined up for its 2006-07 season.


Yahoo! News - 101 ways to massacre The Bard (Reuters)
Reuters - Bouncy Castle Hamlet, Macbeth with a Sinatra soundtrack, Shakespeare for Breakfast with free coffee and croissants.

Rose has another winner brewing
"Double, double, toil and trouble; Fire, burn; and, cauldron, bubble.'' (From Macbeth, by William Shakespeare) As Russ Rose huddles over his pot in his cave in Rec Hall, he continues to brew up his latest concoction.

Monday, December 25, 2006


Shakespeare Biography
Author: Mike Copper

William Shakespeare


William Shakespeare was surely the world's most performed and admired playwright. He was well known in his time, and like many artists his fame continues to grow after his death. His plays dealt with many controversial topics, from racism to witchcraft- perhaps adding to the appeal of his plays in general. Shakespeare led an amazing life for his time, a time when actors and actresses were looked down upon and discriminated. He helped to change this stereotype and altered the world perception of theatre forever. In this report, I will outline many areas of Shakespeare�s life, including His birth, marriage and children, parents and family, education, as well as his death.


Birth and early years 1564


William Shakespeare the famous playwright was born in April, 1564 in Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire, about 100 miles northwest of London. According to the records of Stratford's Holy Trinity Church, he was baptized on April 26. It was customary to baptize infants within days of birth, and because Shakespeare died 52 years later on April 23, and-most significantly-since April 23 is St. George's day, the patron saint of England, it has become traditional to assign the birth day of England's most famous poet to April 23 ( Website). As with most sixteenth century births, the actual day was never officially recorded, but along with most remarkable men the power of myth and symmetry has proven irresistible, so April 23 it has become.


Parents and Family


Shakespeare's parents were John and Mary Shakespeare, who lived in Henley Street, in Stratford. John, the son of Richard Shakespeare, was a whittawer (a maker, worker, and seller of leather goods such as purses, belts and gloves) and a dealer in agricultural commodities. He was a solid, middle class citizen at the time of William's birth, and a man on the rise. He served in Stratford government successively as a member of the Council (1557), constable (1558), chamberlain (1561), alderman (1565), and finally high bailiff (1568)--the equivalent of town mayor. About 1577 John Shakespeare's fortunes began to decline for unknown reasons. There are records of some debts he may have had, but of course, none can be verified for certain. In 1586 he was replaced as alderman for shirking responsibilities, and in 1592 was reprimanded for not coming to church for fear of process of debt ( A Documentary).


Mary, the daughter of Robert Arden, had a total of eight children with John Shakespeare. William was the third child and the first son of the family.


Education


Records for the Stratford grammar school from the time Shakespeare would have attended have been lost, but attend he undoubtedly did since the school was built and maintained expressly for the purpose of educating the sons of prominent citizens. The sons of burgesses attended free (Study and research guide).


The curriculum commenced with the hornbook in order to learn the English alphabet, and thereafter was largely devoted to learning the Latin grammar. School began at dawn and proceeded most of the day, with breaks for meals, six days a week. How long Shakespeare attended the school is not known, but from his obvious mastery and love for the Latin authors, the grammar school must have at least begun the process that he later mastered.


No one knows how long Shakespeare remained at the Stratford Grammar School, but Nicholas Rowe reports that �...the want of his assistance at Home, forc'd his Father to withdraw him from thence.� (Rowe, Some Account of the Life, [2]) (Website). Rowe's source was the actor Thomas Betterton, who made �a journey to Warwickshire on purpose to gather up what remains he could, of a name for which he had so great a veneration (Website).� We cannot be certain, but it would seem likely that William was apprenticed to his father's business in the usual way, perhaps some time around 1577 when John Shakespeare's fortunes seem to take a turn for the worse.


The other significant educational opportunity Elizabethans had was mandatory attendance at church, where they were exposed to either the Geneva Bible or the Bishops' Bible. Church attendance also brought them under the influence of The Book of Common Prayer, Foxe's Acts and Monuments, and homilies and preaching ( Study and research guide).


In any event, part of William's early education must be the ways of business he would have learned around his father's shop. Concerning this period, there is a legend reported in Aubrey's Brief Lives (Aubrey was a seventeenth century gentleman known as a gossip and raconteur--1681) that "...his father was a Butcher, & I have been told heretofore by some of the neighbors, that when he was a boy he exercised his father's Trade, but when he kill'd a Calfe, he would do it in a high style, & make a Speech (Study and research guide)." As unlikely as this behavior seems from someone who shows empathy for animals in his poetry the detail of having been apprenticed to his father may be correct.


Finally, as part of Shakespeare's early education and influences, the Warwickshire countryside cannot be ignored. The plays and poetry are full of images taken from nature, gardening, agricultural pursuits, and country folklore. For example, in Henry V we find this description of the land:


Her vine, the merry cheerer of the heart,


Unpruned dies; her hedges even-pleach'd,


Like prisoners wildly overgrown with hair,


Put forth disorder'd twigs; her fallow leas


The darnel, hemlock, and rank fumitory,


Do root upon, while the coulter rusts,


That should deracinate such savagery;


The even mead, that erst brought sweetly forth


The freckled cowslip, burnet, and green clover,


Wanting the scythe, all uncorrected, rank,


Conceives by idleness, and nothing teems


But hateful docks, rough thistles, kecksies, burs,


Losing both beauty and utility.


This sort of learning could not be gleaned from books and schooling ( Website 2).


Marriage


On November 28, 1582 the Bishop of Worcester issued the marriage bond for �William Shakespeare� and �Ann Hathwey of Stratford.� This was almost beyond doubt Anne Hathaway, daughter of Richard Hathaway of Shottery - a gathering of farm houses near Stratford.


Richard Hathaway's will does not specify a daughter Anne, but names her Agnes, a name used interchangeably for Anne in the sixteenth century. He was a substantial, Warwickshire farmer with a spacious house and fields.


The banns were asked only once in church, rather than the customary three times, because the bride was some three months pregnant and there was reason for haste in concluding the marriage. She was eight years older than her new husband William. We can only wonder if Shakespeare was speaking for himself in A Midsummer Night's Dream:


Lysander: The course of true love never did run smooth;


But either it was different in blood...


Or else misgraffed in respect of years--


Hermia: O spite! too old to be engage'd to young.


Or in Twelfth Night:


Duke: Then let thy love be younger than thyself,


Or thy affection cannot hold the bent;


For women are as roses, whose fair flow'r


Being once display'd doth fall that very hour.


(Study and research guide)


The only mention of his wife in Shakespeare's will is the famous bequest of his "second best bed." Whether as a fond remembrance or a bitter slight is not known.


Children


Whatever subsequent feelings, on May 26, 1583 their first daughter Susanna was baptised. Two years later twins were also born, Hamnet and Judith. The twins were most likely named after Hamnet and Judith Sadler, apparently lifetime friends to Shakespeare and remembered in his will.


It is usually assumed by scholars that Shakespeare resided in Stratford at the Henley street residence these years, at least through 1585, but his manner of life and activities are not known and have become the subject of many speculations. (Website)


Death 1616


Undoubtedly Shakespeare's son-in-law, Dr. Hall, attended him at his death. The nature of his final illness is remains unknown. A legend has grown up based on an entry in John Ward, a Stratford vicar's diary. Ward wrote that "Shakspear Drayton and Ben Jhonson had a merry meeting and it seems drank too hard for Shakespear died of a feavour there contracted." The problem is that the report came from a diary half a century after Shakespeare's death, and cannot be confirmed otherwise (Website 2). Undoubtedly Ward was a local gossip and knew Judith Shakespeare in her later years, but we cannot know if this story amounts to anything more than just and idle rumor.


Shakespeare died on April 23, 1616 and was buried in the chancel of Holy Trinity Church April 25. On the slab over his grave appear the words:


GOOD FREND FOR JESUS SAKE FORBEARE,


TO DIGG THE DUST ENCLOASED HEARE.


BLESTE BE Ye MAN Yt SPARES THES STONES,


AND CURST BE HE Yt MOVES MY BONES.


To this day, the inscription mentioned has been honored, and Shakespeare�s body remains at rest.


Conclusion


Shakespeare lead a very interesting and eventful life. This report helped to inform about the life that he lead, yet it is only able to scratch the surface of the events that he influenced in his lifetime. Shakespeare managed to impact thousands of people by turning theatre into a respectable and admirable profession instead of a discriminated one. At the same time, he created many works that remain to be arguably the best ever written. His writings continue to be a benchmark in modern theatre, which are yet to be surpassed.


Bibliography


Bergeron, Sousa. Shakespeare: A Study and Research Guide. New York: Del Publishing Co., 1973.


Schoenbaum, Arthur. William Shakespeare: A Documentary Life. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson., 1968


The Complete Works of Shakespeare. 2 May 1999


The Shakespeare Quarterly. The Shakespeare Association of America. 29 April 1999


�Shakespeare, William�. Encarta 95. CD-ROM. Microsoft, 1995.


Dr. M. Cooper provides research and term paper assistance at http://www.TermPaperAdvisor and http://www.TermPapersMadeEasy.com.


For more information about Shakespeare, please visit:


 http://www.shakespeare-macbeth.com


 


Complete Macbeth Interactive 1.10
Macbeth taught scene by scene, with dramatic audio readings, geography, movies, questions, immediate feedback, and teacher-friendly scoring, with a focus on language devices and Shakespeare's historical sources. This program contains a user-friendly and intuitive navigation with pleasing graphical interfaces and challenging questions on the text. Involves three of the five senses in a unique approach to teaching the darkest of Shakespeare's works. Created, with all the intelligences in mind, for secondary students.Technorati Tags: macbeth, shakespeare, language arts, AP, teacher tools, lab software, education.Refer:http://www.popsoftlib.com/Home_Education/Teaching_Tools/Complete_Macbeth_Interactive/info-44444.html

Sam Worthington in Macbeth / supplied
ROMPER Stomper director Geoffrey Wright is certain his film adaption of Shakespeare's classic Macbeth will offend some people.

It's a new season, from 'Macbeth' to 'Bye Bye Birdie'
Speaking of Shakespeare, here's what the Seattle Shakespeare Company has lined up for its 2006-07 season.


Macbeth auditions to be held at USD
The University of South Dakota Department of Theatre will hold auditions for Macbeth, Shakespeare's towering classic, from 7 to 10 p.m. Aug.

101 ways to massacre Shakespeare (Reuters)
Reuters - Bouncy Castle Hamlet, Macbeth with a Sinatra soundtrack, Shakespeare for Breakfast with free coffee and croissants.

Sunday, December 24, 2006


Shakespeare and Human Nature
Author: C. Bailey-Lloyd

Isn't it peculiar how human nature evolves through environmental and socialogical conditions? It is evident that we, as Human beings, tend to characterize our capabilities, strengths and emotional intelligence through bonds of society. As we encounter diverse walks of life we have a bizarre and acute tendency to create new personalities. Through human nature, we unintentionally become one with our counterparts. One can travel East to West, North to South and eventually evolution of the mind and soul takes its natural course.


Although differences exist, we enable ourselves to find common bonds of life in general. In doing so, we can interrelate with each other and attain goals that apart, are seemingly impossible. In doing so, great undertakings are initiated. We revolutionize our world through interaction and coexistence.


Even the most minute action creates an affect. In human nature, we attract those that mirror ourselves in small ways. By relating to past and present circumstances, we shape our world of tomorrow. Like clay, we mold ourselves to the structures that be. Perhaps chameleons display the best sense of human nature as they cleverly and instantaneously blend with their surroundings. Not only is this an excellent manuever to avoid danger, it is also a profound way to "fit in" and become one with its immediate environment.


Human nature never ceases amazement. We nurture ourselves with spirituality, duality and even complacency at times, but throughout life , we always manage to grow from our experiences. We learn acceptance and emotional understanding through our compelling desire to "be." Shakespeare's haunting & elusive words, "...to be or not to be...that is the question..." is the most profound phrase in human history. All human nature revolves around this particular piece of artistry - "...to be or not to be..." Shakespeare querried all Mankind.


Human nature is intriquitely defined by its owner. If we wish to merely exist, then exist we do. But if we take his question to a higher state of mind, we find life's perfect answer: Mankind's nature is to evolve. Not only to simply exist but to assure nonextinction of our species. We must use our natural instincts and capabilities to overcome and conquer. That, as in all things, must mature and ripen to a state of wholeness. Human nature may fool those and lure unsuspecting travelers of time, but the higher truth of human nature is the self exploration of life and the ability to broaden horizons of the self or "alter ego" and other individuals so they, too may come to see and equally realize the unequivocal and honest meaning of life.


Yes, Shakespeare conquered literature with his defined works of human nature; but the question he asks of us still confuses even the most intelligent and collegiate individuals of our time. In this day and age, we have a choice "to be or not to be." This is no longer an inquiry but an option. We, as Humans, must choose the path of higher truth and awareness. By remaining unattached, we choose not to fully exist. A play of words can tantalize the senses, but Human nature can enrich the world in which we live. The choice is yours.


01/2003


C. Bailey-Lloyd
aka. LadyCamelot
Public Relations' Director & Staff Writer for Holistic Junction - Your Source for information on Massage Therapy Schools, Holistic Practitioners, Alternative Health, Insightful literature and more!


For more information about Shakespeare, please visit: http://www.shakespeare-macbeth.com


 


It's a new season, from 'Macbeth' to 'Bye Bye Birdie'
Speaking of Shakespeare, here's what the Seattle Shakespeare Company has lined up for its 2006-07 season.

Rose has another winner brewing
"Double, double, toil and trouble; Fire, burn; and, cauldron, bubble.'' (From Macbeth, by William Shakespeare) As Russ Rose huddles over his pot in his cave in Rec Hall, he continues to brew up his latest concoction.

Yahoo! News - 101 ways to massacre Shakespeare (Reuters)
Reuters - Bouncy Castle Hamlet, Macbeth with a Sinatra soundtrack, Shakespeare for Breakfast with free coffee and croissants.


Contest Crazy 8/15
Hello Everyone! On this Day August 15th....... 1057: In events later used by William Shakespeare in one of his greatest tragedies, the Scottish king Macbeth is killed by Malcolm Canmore, the son of King Duncan I, whom Macbeth had murdered 17 years before. 1534: Saint Ignatius of Loyola founds the Jesuits, a Roman Catholic order of men, in Paris, France. 1935: American humorist Will Rogers and aviator Wiley Post are killed when their plane crashes in Alaska. 1939: The film version of The Wizard of Oz, starring Judy Garland as Dorothy, ...

101 ways to massacre Shakespeare (Reuters)
Reuters - Bouncy Castle Hamlet, Macbeth with a Sinatra soundtrack, Shakespeare for Breakfast with free coffee and croissants.

Saturday, December 23, 2006


Shakespeare 's Sonnet XVIII, Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer's Day?
Author: Garry Gamber

Shakespeare�s sonnets require time and effort to appreciate. Understanding the numerous meanings of the lines, the crisply made references, the brilliance of the images, and the complexity of the sound, rhythm and structure of the verse demands attention and experience. The rewards are plentiful as few writers have ever approached the richness of Shakespeare�s prose and poetry.


�Sonnet XVIII� is also known as, �Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer�s Day?� It was written around 1599 and published with over 150 other sonnets in 1609 by Thomas Thorpe.


The first 126 sonnets are written to a youth, a boy, probably about 19, and perhaps specifically, William Herbert, Earl of Pembroke. His initials, W.H., appear in Thorpe�s dedication, and the first volume of Shakespeare�s plays, published by two of his fellow actors, Herminge and Condell, after Shakespeare�s death, was dedicated to William Herbert.


�Sonnet XVIII� is one of the most famous of all of Shakespeare�s sonnets. It is written in the sonnet style that Shakespeare preferred, 14 lines long with three quatrains (four rhymed lines) and a couplet (a pair of rhymed lines).


The Sonnet praises the youth�s beauty and disposition, comparing and contrasting the youth to a summer day. Then the sonnet immortalizes the youth through the �eternal lines� of the sonnet.


First Quatrain


The first line announces the comparison of the youth with a summer day. But the second line says that the youth is more perfect than a summer day. �More temperate� can be interpreted as more gentle. A summer day can have excesses such as rough winds. In Shakespeare�s time May was considered a summer month, a reference in the third line. The fourth line contains the metaphor that summer holds a lease on the year, but the lease is of a short duration.


Second Quatrain


This quatrain details how the summer can be imperfect, traits that the youth does not possess. The fifth line personifies the sun as �the eye of heaven� which is sometimes too scorchingly hot. On the other hand, �his gold complexion,� the face of the sun, can be dimmed by overcast and clouds. According to line 7, all beautiful things (fair means beautiful) sometimes decline from their state of beauty or perfection by chance accidents or by natural events. �Untrimmed� in line 8 means a lack of decoration and perhaps refers to every beauty from line 7.


Third Quatrain


This quatrain explains that the youth will possess eternal beauty and perfection. In line 10 �ow�st� is short for ownest, meaning possess. In other words, the youth �shall not lose any of your beauty.� Line 11 says that death will not conquer life and may refer to the shades of classical literature (Virgil�s Aeneid) who wander helplessly in the underworld. In line 12 �eternal lines� refers to the undying lines of the sonnet. Shakespeare realized that the sonnet is able to achieve an eternal status, and that one could be immortalized within it.


The Final Couplet


The couplet is easy to interpret. For as long as humans live and breathe on earth with eyes that can see, this is how long these verses will live. And these verses celebrate the youth and continually renew the youth's life.


�Shall I Compare Thee� is one of the most often quoted sonnets of Shakespeare. It is complex, yet elegant and memorable, and can be quoted by men and women alike. It has been enjoyed by all generations since Shakespeare and will continue to be enjoyed �so long as men can breathe, or eyes can see.�


Sonnet XVIII, Shall I Compare Thee?
By William Shakespeare


Shall I compare thee to a Summer's day?
Thou are more lovely and more temperate:
Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May,
And Summer's lease hath all too short a date:
Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines,
And often is his gold complexion dimm'd;
And every fair from fair sometime declines,
By chance or nature's changing course untrimm'd:
But thy eternal Summer shall not fade
Nor lose possession of that fair thou ow'st;
Nor shall Death brag thou wander'st in his shade,
When in eternal lines to time thou grow'st:
So long as men can breathe, or eyes can see,
So long lives this, and this gives life to thee.


*****************************


Garry Gamber is a public school teacher. He writes articles about politics, real estate, health and nutrition, and internet dating services. He is the owner of http://www.Anchorage-Homes.com and http://www.TheDatingAdvisor.com.


For more information about Shakespeare, please visit: http://www.shakespeare-macbeth.com


 


Contest Crazy 8/15
Hello Everyone! On this Day August 15th....... 1057: In events later used by William Shakespeare in one of his greatest tragedies, the Scottish king Macbeth is killed by Malcolm Canmore, the son of King Duncan I, whom Macbeth had murdered 17 years before. 1534: Saint Ignatius of Loyola founds the Jesuits, a Roman Catholic order of men, in Paris, France. 1935: American humorist Will Rogers and aviator Wiley Post are killed when their plane crashes in Alaska. 1939: The film version of The Wizard of Oz, starring Judy Garland as Dorothy, ...

It's a new season, from 'Macbeth' to 'Bye Bye Birdie'
Speaking of Shakespeare, here's what the Seattle Shakespeare Company has lined up for its 2006-07 season.

Macbeth [videorecording] / by William Shakespeare ; a BBC Television production in association with Time-Life Television ; produced by Shaun Sutton ; directed by Jack Gold.
New York : Ambrose Video Pub., [2000 or 2001] PR 2823 A23 2000 PR 2823 A23 2000 (MEDIA)


Mad About 'Macbeth'
2006 sees two new big screen versions of Shakespeare's tragedy, including a local one set in Melbourne's gangland.

101 ways to massacre Shakespeare (Reuters)
Reuters - Bouncy Castle Hamlet, Macbeth with a Sinatra soundtrack, Shakespeare for Breakfast with free coffee and croissants.

Thursday, December 21, 2006


English Has Come A Long, Long Way...


English Has Come A Long, Long Way...


 by: David Leonhardt


I often wonder what would happen if Shakespeare were to be transported in a time machine to our world today. What would he think? How would he react?


Yes, Willie would probably tell me "thou hast too much time on thy hands if thou spendeth it wondering about such flights of fancy." But only after he found his feet.


You see, Willie would be blown away by some of the comforts we take for granted. For instance, that box we walk into. The doors close all by themselves...just like magic. When they open, we are magically in a different place.


"What callest thou this contraption?" Willie would ask in utter amazement.


An elevator. You would think nothing would phase a man who just landed his time machine 400 years into the future.


"Ah, I see. It was not magic after all. It elevated us, because it is an elevator."


This Willie guy is pretty handy with his English, isn't he? But that won't get him far these days. A hundred years ago, even fifty, he could have figured out just about every new word by tracing its roots (often to Greek or Latin). But not today.


"What are those...those...those, things?"


Why that's a TV, with a VCR and a DVD player. Over there, it's a CD player, an AM and FM radio and an amp. This is a PC, with CDRW and floppy drives, a powerful CPU, A and C drive, and more RAM than a MAC.


"What? Thy alphabet seems a bit confusing."


Once upon a time, the meaning of a word could always be guessed by simply tracing the entomology of the word back to its lowest roots.


"Thou meanest 'etymology', dost thou not? Entomology is the study of insects and bugs."


I knew that.


I took out a 'Kleenex' because my nose was running.


"But how dost thy nose run?"


I suppose the same way I drivest on a parkway and parkest in the driveway. Or how it doesn't matter whether we fill in a form or fill out a form...either way, the taxman gets the last laugh.


I offered to take Willie for a ride.


"That is more like it. There is nothing quite like a horse under one's bottom.'


No, no, no. We don't ride horses anymore. That is a barbaric way to treat such majestic beasts. Now we drive cars...and kill the horses off with the exhaust.


"I have no idea what you are talking about."


Just have a seat in the BMW, Willie, while I turn on the AC and rev up the RPMs on this old V6. Before you know it, we'll be doing 100 mph down the 102.


"More letters and numbers. Have words become redundant in the future?"


Pretty much. As life got more and more complicated, words got more and more complicated. Pretty soon it was taking several minutes just to pronounce a single government department. So real word groups had to be replaced by acronyms � the first letter of each word. Pass me a CANDY.


"What does CANDY stand for?"


Candy, actually. But maybe I should just leave old Willie guessing. After all, there is just so much to discover in this brave new world. Like why there are so few sundials around. And why some people sleep on the street, while other climb 34 stories to an office tower above to sleep at their desks. And just how do they shrink those liquor bottles for the airlines.


"What is an RSVP? And ASAP? And TLC?"


I had to find just the right way to explain to him that all these crazy letters actually made some kind of sense.


Internal Department of Income Overhaul Transfer Systems.


"Ah, IDIOTS. Now, that I understand!"






About The Author


Like Shakespeare, David Leonhardt is a writer: He is author of:
Inspiration & Motivation To Go:
http://www.thehappyguy.com/l/daily-motivation-inspiration.php
The Get Happy Workbook:
http://www.thehappyguy.com/happiness-work-book.html
and Climb Your Stairway to Heaven: the 9 habits of maximum happiness:
http://www.thehappyguy.com/happiness-self-help-book.html
To write your website copy, newsletter or anything else, email him at: info@thehappyguy.com
Info@thehappyguy.com


For more information about Shakespeare, please visit:  http://www.shakespeare-macbeth.com


 


Macbeth [videorecording] / by William Shakespeare ; a BBC Television production in association with Time-Life Television ; produced by Shaun Sutton ; directed by Jack Gold.
New York : Ambrose Video Pub., [2000 or 2001] PR 2823 A23 2000 PR 2823 A23 2000 (MEDIA)

101 ways to massacre Shakespeare (Reuters)
EDINBURGH (Reuters) - Bouncy Castle Hamlet, Macbeth with a Sinatra soundtrack, Shakespeare for Breakfast with free coffee and croissants.

Mad About 'Macbeth'
2006 sees two new big screen versions of Shakespeare's tragedy, including a local one set in Melbourne's gangland.


Mad About 'Macbeth'
2006 sees two new big screen versions of Shakespeare's tragedy, including a local one set in Melbourne's gangland.

Yahoo! News - 101 ways to massacre The Bard (Reuters)
Reuters - Bouncy Castle Hamlet, Macbeth with a Sinatra soundtrack, Shakespeare for Breakfast with free coffee and croissants.

Wednesday, December 20, 2006


Here is some updated news about Shakespeare:


 


Macbeth [videorecording] / by William Shakespeare ; a BBC Television production in association with Time-Life Television ; produced by Shaun Sutton ; directed by Jack Gold.
New York : Ambrose Video Pub., [2000 or 2001] PR 2823 A23 2000 PR 2823 A23 2000 (MEDIA)

Macbeth auditions to be held at USD
The University of South Dakota Department of Theatre will hold auditions for Macbeth, Shakespeare's towering classic, from 7 to 10 p.m. Aug.

untitled
The last word on Tom Cruise: "It is a tale Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury; Signifying nothing." ATTRIBUTION: William Shakespeare Macbeth, in Macbeth, act 5, sc. 5.


Tuesday, December 19, 2006

Yahoo! News - 101 ways to massacre The Bard (Reuters)
Reuters - Bouncy Castle Hamlet, Macbeth with a Sinatra soundtrack, Shakespeare for Breakfast with free coffee and croissants.

Mad About 'Macbeth'
2006 sees two new big screen versions of Shakespeare's tragedy, including a local one set in Melbourne's gangland.

Rose has another winner brewing
"Double, double, toil and trouble; Fire, burn; and, cauldron, bubble.'' (From Macbeth, by William Shakespeare) As Russ Rose huddles over his pot in his cave in Rec Hall, he continues to brew up his latest concoction.

Monday, December 18, 2006


For more information about Shakespeare, please visit: http://www.shakespeare-macbeth.com


 


Macbeth [videorecording] / by William Shakespeare ; a BBC Television production in association with Time-Life Television ; produced by Shaun Sutton ; directed by Jack Gold.
New York : Ambrose Video Pub., [2000 or 2001] PR 2823 A23 2000 PR 2823 A23 2000 (MEDIA)

Special session may lay groundwork for January
A twist of Shakespeare's King Macbeth oration offers the best description of the activity surrounding tax reform in the upcoming special session: "a tale

mikepurvis on Homework makes kids hate learning
I was never really a fan of lit, especially the analysis stuff, but I knew a lot of people who never have read anything they didn't have to read for school. Regardless of how much they think they internalized, it's probably good to have been through Hamlet and Macbeth at least once or twice. I'm wary of "it sucks but it's good for you"-style arguments (especially when they're used to justify nonsense like this); perhaps the onus is on the teachers to make lit not suck. But students should be able to realise that even if they don't like Catcher in the Rye, it's worth holding on for the undisputed classics. (Shakespeare, Watership Down, Flowers for Algernon, etc.)


Complete Macbeth Interactive 1.10
Macbeth taught scene by scene, with dramatic audio readings, geography, movies, questions, immediate feedback, and teacher-friendly scoring, with a focus on language devices and Shakespeare's historical sources. This program contains a user-friendly and intuitive navigation with pleasing graphical interfaces and challenging questions on the text. Involves three of the five senses in a unique approach to teaching the darkest of Shakespeare's works. Created, with all the intelligences in mind, for secondary students.Technorati Tags: macbeth, shakespeare, language arts, AP, teacher tools, lab software, education.Refer:http://www.popsoftlib.com/Home_Education/Teaching_Tools/Complete_Macbeth_Interactive/info-44444.html

Special session may lay groundwork for January
A twist of Shakespeare's King Macbeth oration offers the best description of the activity surrounding tax reform in the upcoming special session: "a tale

Macbeth
SYDNEY -- Baz Luhrmann set the bar high for maverick adaptations of Shakespeare, but fellow Aussie director Geoffrey Wright takes a game leap at it with his postmodern rendering of "Macbeth."...

Yahoo! News - 101 ways to massacre Shakespeare (Reuters)
Reuters - Bouncy Castle Hamlet, Macbeth with a Sinatra soundtrack, Shakespeare for Breakfast with free coffee and croissants.

Sunday, December 17, 2006

Current News and events related to Shakespeare:
Rose has another winner brewing
"Double, double, toil and trouble; Fire, burn; and, cauldron, bubble.'' (From Macbeth, by William Shakespeare) As Russ Rose huddles over his pot in his cave in Rec Hall, he continues to brew up his latest concoction.

Lusting for more wiki action
Here's a topic that promises to spur some online conversations: Nancy Pearl and her Book Lust empire is one of the newest wiki sites on Wetpaint. The beloved Seattle librarian is the subject of what Seattle start-up Wetpaint calls "a community for people who love books." The wiki is apparently a team effort by Wetpaint and Pearl's publisher, Sasquatch Books, the Puget Sound Business Journal reports. I like the feature that lets you "post a question for Nancy." So what does she think it takes to be well-read? A large dose of Shakespeare (King Lear, Hamlet, or MacBeth), some Herman Melville (Moby Dick), the poems of Walt Whitman, The Apology by Plato, and Oedipus Rex by Sophocles. For a different kind of book lover, there's an entire wiki devoted to the DaVinci Code.

Special session may lay groundwork for January
Pignanelli: A twist of Shakespeare's King Macbeth oration offers the best description of the activity surrounding tax reform in the upcoming special session: "a tale ... full of sound and fury, signif...


Macbeth [videorecording] / by William Shakespeare ; a BBC Television production in association with Time-Life Television ; produced by Shaun Sutton ; directed by Jack Gold.
New York : Ambrose Video Pub., [2000 or 2001] PR 2823 A23 2000 PR 2823 A23 2000 (MEDIA)

Special session may lay groundwork for January
Pignanelli: A twist of Shakespeare's King Macbeth oration offers the best description of the activity surrounding tax reform in the upcoming special session: "a tale ... full of sound and fury, signif...

Macbeth
SYDNEY -- Baz Luhrmann set the bar high for maverick adaptations of Shakespeare, but fellow Aussie director Geoffrey Wright takes a game leap at it with his postmodern rendering of "Macbeth."...

It's Too Late to be Warned..
"Yet do I fear thy nature; It is too full o' the milk of human kindness." -"Macbeth", Shakespeare Sarah has run out of nice. And it's Tuesday. Beware.

Friday, December 15, 2006


Up to date information about Shakespeare:


 


It's a new season, from 'Macbeth' to 'Bye Bye Birdie'
Speaking of Shakespeare, here's what the Seattle Shakespeare Company has lined up for its 2006-07 season.

Rose has another winner brewing
"Double, double, toil and trouble; Fire, burn; and, cauldron, bubble.'' (From Macbeth, by William Shakespeare) As Russ Rose huddles over his pot in his cave in Rec Hall, he continues to brew up his latest concoction.

Mad About 'Macbeth'
2006 sees two new big screen versions of Shakespeare's tragedy, including a local one set in Melbourne's gangland.


Special session may lay groundwork for January
Pignanelli: A twist of Shakespeare's King Macbeth oration offers the best description of the activity surrounding tax reform in the upcoming special session: "a tale ... full of sound and fury, signif...

Special session may lay groundwork for January
Pignanelli: A twist of Shakespeare's King Macbeth oration offers the best description of the activity surrounding tax reform in the upcoming special session: "a tale ... full of sound and fury, signif...

Macbeth auditions to be held at USD
The University of South Dakota Department of Theatre will hold auditions for Macbeth, Shakespeare's towering classic, from 7 to 10 p.m. Aug.

It's Too Late to be Warned..
"Yet do I fear thy nature; It is too full o' the milk of human kindness." -"Macbeth", Shakespeare Sarah has run out of nice. And it's Tuesday. Beware.

Thursday, December 14, 2006


Updated News on Shakespeare:


 


Yahoo! News - 101 ways to massacre The Bard (Reuters)
Reuters - Bouncy Castle Hamlet, Macbeth with a Sinatra soundtrack, Shakespeare for Breakfast with free coffee and croissants.

Macbeth
SYDNEY -- Baz Luhrmann set the bar high for maverick adaptations of Shakespeare, but fellow Aussie director Geoffrey Wright takes a game leap at it with his postmodern rendering of "Macbeth."...

101 ways to massacre The Bard (Reuters)
EDINBURGH (Reuters) - Bouncy Castle Hamlet, Macbeth with a Sinatra soundtrack, Shakespeare for Breakfast with free coffee and croissants.


Contest Crazy 8/15
Hello Everyone! On this Day August 15th....... 1057: In events later used by William Shakespeare in one of his greatest tragedies, the Scottish king Macbeth is killed by Malcolm Canmore, the son of King Duncan I, whom Macbeth had murdered 17 years before. 1534: Saint Ignatius of Loyola founds the Jesuits, a Roman Catholic order of men, in Paris, France. 1935: American humorist Will Rogers and aviator Wiley Post are killed when their plane crashes in Alaska. 1939: The film version of The Wizard of Oz, starring Judy Garland as Dorothy, ...

Macbeth (MA15+) - Released Thu, 21 Sep 2006
Director, Geoffrey Wright's contemporary retelling of Shakespeare's classic tale is set in the ganglands of Melbourne. Starring: Sam Worthington, Victoria Hill, Lachy Hulme, Gary Sweet, Steve Bastoni

101 ways to massacre Shakespeare (Reuters)
Reuters - Bouncy Castle Hamlet, Macbeth with a Sinatra soundtrack, Shakespeare for Breakfast with free coffee and croissants.

untitled
The last word on Tom Cruise: "It is a tale Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury; Signifying nothing." ATTRIBUTION: William Shakespeare Macbeth, in Macbeth, act 5, sc. 5.

Wednesday, December 13, 2006


Term Paper on Shakespeare 's Sonnets
Author: Michael Cooper

Shakespeare's Sonnets: Time and Decay


Eventually, time and decay effect everything. Shakespeare uses this theme in many of his sonnets. The sonnets give no hint of an afterlife and express that nothing survives time. Shakespeare used numerous methods to depict this theme including personification, metaphors and similes. Even though Shakespeare says that time destroys everything, he also addresses how to �defeat� time to a degree. One way to �defeat� time is to marry and have children. A person�s offspring will in some measure carry him or her on throughout time. Shakespeare also believed that poetry is immortal and those who are featured in them will be also. He offers this immortality to his friend and the dark lady. This paper will examine the theme of time and decay in sonnets 15, 18, and 73.


In sonnet 15, Shakespeare writes about the changes that people go through and maturity. In it the sonnet states that perfection only lasts for a little time. He writes, �When I consider every thing that grows holds in perfection but a little moment�� (lines 1 �2). He compares men to plants and says that they display themselves at the height of their perfection and then are slowly forgotten. In other words life is like a flower that blooms. It bursts out with beauty and then time and decay cause it to slowly wither away to old age and death. In the last couplet of the sonnet, Shakespeare gives his friend a way to win the war with time and decay and implant his beauty again. The way offers this is to be featured in his poetry. What better way to �live on� then to be read about for centuries?


The cycle of the year is used to describe life in sonnet 18. Spring equals youth, summer equals maturity and perfection, fall equals middle age and winter equals old age. Shakespeare writes �Shall I compare thee to a summer�s day? Thou art more lovely and more temperate�And summer�s lease hath all too short a date�� (lines 1,2 and 4). He is saying to his friend that he is in the height of his perfection right now, but it will not last for very long. Again towards the end of the sonnet he tells him that he shall conquer time and decay by being immortal in his poetry �But thy eternal summer shall not fade�When in eternal lines to time thou grow�st� (lines 9 and 12).


Sonnet 73 is a little different because Shakespeare is making a plea to the dark lady because their love is dying. The whole sonnet has indications of fall such as �That time of year thou mayst in me behold when yellow leaves, or none, or few, do hang�� (lines 1 and 2). This is making use of the cycle of the year again and he is expressing that he is in middle age and soon approaching twilight or death



�In me thou seest the twilight of such a day


As after sunset fadeth in the west;


Which by and by black night doth take away,


Death�s second self that seals up all in rest.� (Lines 5-8)



He is saying that he is past his moment of perfection and that death will come soon. Time and decay have started to affect him. In the last couplet of the sonnet he states that the dark lady should value him more because he won�t be here for long, instead of forgetting him because he is no longer in his moment of perfection.


Shakespeare used the theme of time and decay frequently in his sonnets. He states that everything has a brief moment of perfection, which is it�s maturity, and then slowly withers and dies away. He uses many different ways to get this point across including the comparison of life to a year and a day. Shakespeare also tells of how time and decay might be �defeated�. He gives this �immortality to his friend and the dark lady through the written word.


Dr. Mike Cooper provides term paper assistance to college students at http://www.termpaperadvisor.com and http://www.safe-papers.com. Above is a term paper example from his website.


Dr. Mike Copper provides term paper, essay, and research assistance to college and university students.


For more information about Shakespeare, please visit: http://www.shakespeare-macbeth.com


 


Contest Crazy 8/15
Hello Everyone! On this Day August 15th....... 1057: In events later used by William Shakespeare in one of his greatest tragedies, the Scottish king Macbeth is killed by Malcolm Canmore, the son of King Duncan I, whom Macbeth had murdered 17 years before. 1534: Saint Ignatius of Loyola founds the Jesuits, a Roman Catholic order of men, in Paris, France. 1935: American humorist Will Rogers and aviator Wiley Post are killed when their plane crashes in Alaska. 1939: The film version of The Wizard of Oz, starring Judy Garland as Dorothy, ...

Macbeth [videorecording] / by William Shakespeare ; a BBC Television production in association with Time-Life Television ; produced by Shaun Sutton ; directed by Jack Gold.
New York : Ambrose Video Pub., [2000 or 2001] PR 2823 A23 2000 PR 2823 A23 2000 (MEDIA)

Complete Macbeth Interactive 1.10
Macbeth taught scene by scene, with dramatic audio readings, geography, movies, questions, immediate feedback, and teacher-friendly scoring, with a focus on language devices and Shakespeare's historical sources. This program contains a user-friendly and intuitive navigation with pleasing graphical interfaces and challenging questions on the text. Involves three of the five senses in a unique approach to teaching the darkest of Shakespeare's works. Created, with all the intelligences in mind, for secondary students.Technorati Tags: macbeth, shakespeare, language arts, AP, teacher tools, lab software, education.Refer:http://www.popsoftlib.com/Home_Education/Teaching_Tools/Complete_Macbeth_Interactive/info-44444.html


Special session may lay groundwork for January
A twist of Shakespeare's King Macbeth oration offers the best description of the activity surrounding tax reform in the upcoming special session: "a tale

Yahoo! News - 101 ways to massacre Shakespeare (Reuters)
Reuters - Bouncy Castle Hamlet, Macbeth with a Sinatra soundtrack, Shakespeare for Breakfast with free coffee and croissants.

Monday, December 11, 2006


Shakespeare Biography
Author: Mike Copper

William Shakespeare


William Shakespeare was surely the world's most performed and admired playwright. He was well known in his time, and like many artists his fame continues to grow after his death. His plays dealt with many controversial topics, from racism to witchcraft- perhaps adding to the appeal of his plays in general. Shakespeare led an amazing life for his time, a time when actors and actresses were looked down upon and discriminated. He helped to change this stereotype and altered the world perception of theatre forever. In this report, I will outline many areas of Shakespeare�s life, including His birth, marriage and children, parents and family, education, as well as his death.


Birth and early years 1564


William Shakespeare the famous playwright was born in April, 1564 in Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire, about 100 miles northwest of London. According to the records of Stratford's Holy Trinity Church, he was baptized on April 26. It was customary to baptize infants within days of birth, and because Shakespeare died 52 years later on April 23, and-most significantly-since April 23 is St. George's day, the patron saint of England, it has become traditional to assign the birth day of England's most famous poet to April 23 ( Website). As with most sixteenth century births, the actual day was never officially recorded, but along with most remarkable men the power of myth and symmetry has proven irresistible, so April 23 it has become.


Parents and Family


Shakespeare's parents were John and Mary Shakespeare, who lived in Henley Street, in Stratford. John, the son of Richard Shakespeare, was a whittawer (a maker, worker, and seller of leather goods such as purses, belts and gloves) and a dealer in agricultural commodities. He was a solid, middle class citizen at the time of William's birth, and a man on the rise. He served in Stratford government successively as a member of the Council (1557), constable (1558), chamberlain (1561), alderman (1565), and finally high bailiff (1568)--the equivalent of town mayor. About 1577 John Shakespeare's fortunes began to decline for unknown reasons. There are records of some debts he may have had, but of course, none can be verified for certain. In 1586 he was replaced as alderman for shirking responsibilities, and in 1592 was reprimanded for not coming to church for fear of process of debt ( A Documentary).


Mary, the daughter of Robert Arden, had a total of eight children with John Shakespeare. William was the third child and the first son of the family.


Education


Records for the Stratford grammar school from the time Shakespeare would have attended have been lost, but attend he undoubtedly did since the school was built and maintained expressly for the purpose of educating the sons of prominent citizens. The sons of burgesses attended free (Study and research guide).


The curriculum commenced with the hornbook in order to learn the English alphabet, and thereafter was largely devoted to learning the Latin grammar. School began at dawn and proceeded most of the day, with breaks for meals, six days a week. How long Shakespeare attended the school is not known, but from his obvious mastery and love for the Latin authors, the grammar school must have at least begun the process that he later mastered.


No one knows how long Shakespeare remained at the Stratford Grammar School, but Nicholas Rowe reports that �...the want of his assistance at Home, forc'd his Father to withdraw him from thence.� (Rowe, Some Account of the Life, [2]) (Website). Rowe's source was the actor Thomas Betterton, who made �a journey to Warwickshire on purpose to gather up what remains he could, of a name for which he had so great a veneration (Website).� We cannot be certain, but it would seem likely that William was apprenticed to his father's business in the usual way, perhaps some time around 1577 when John Shakespeare's fortunes seem to take a turn for the worse.


The other significant educational opportunity Elizabethans had was mandatory attendance at church, where they were exposed to either the Geneva Bible or the Bishops' Bible. Church attendance also brought them under the influence of The Book of Common Prayer, Foxe's Acts and Monuments, and homilies and preaching ( Study and research guide).


In any event, part of William's early education must be the ways of business he would have learned around his father's shop. Concerning this period, there is a legend reported in Aubrey's Brief Lives (Aubrey was a seventeenth century gentleman known as a gossip and raconteur--1681) that "...his father was a Butcher, & I have been told heretofore by some of the neighbors, that when he was a boy he exercised his father's Trade, but when he kill'd a Calfe, he would do it in a high style, & make a Speech (Study and research guide)." As unlikely as this behavior seems from someone who shows empathy for animals in his poetry the detail of having been apprenticed to his father may be correct.


Finally, as part of Shakespeare's early education and influences, the Warwickshire countryside cannot be ignored. The plays and poetry are full of images taken from nature, gardening, agricultural pursuits, and country folklore. For example, in Henry V we find this description of the land:


Her vine, the merry cheerer of the heart,


Unpruned dies; her hedges even-pleach'd,


Like prisoners wildly overgrown with hair,


Put forth disorder'd twigs; her fallow leas


The darnel, hemlock, and rank fumitory,


Do root upon, while the coulter rusts,


That should deracinate such savagery;


The even mead, that erst brought sweetly forth


The freckled cowslip, burnet, and green clover,


Wanting the scythe, all uncorrected, rank,


Conceives by idleness, and nothing teems


But hateful docks, rough thistles, kecksies, burs,


Losing both beauty and utility.


This sort of learning could not be gleaned from books and schooling ( Website 2).


Marriage


On November 28, 1582 the Bishop of Worcester issued the marriage bond for �William Shakespeare� and �Ann Hathwey of Stratford.� This was almost beyond doubt Anne Hathaway, daughter of Richard Hathaway of Shottery - a gathering of farm houses near Stratford.


Richard Hathaway's will does not specify a daughter Anne, but names her Agnes, a name used interchangeably for Anne in the sixteenth century. He was a substantial, Warwickshire farmer with a spacious house and fields.


The banns were asked only once in church, rather than the customary three times, because the bride was some three months pregnant and there was reason for haste in concluding the marriage. She was eight years older than her new husband William. We can only wonder if Shakespeare was speaking for himself in A Midsummer Night's Dream:


Lysander: The course of true love never did run smooth;


But either it was different in blood...


Or else misgraffed in respect of years--


Hermia: O spite! too old to be engage'd to young.


Or in Twelfth Night:


Duke: Then let thy love be younger than thyself,


Or thy affection cannot hold the bent;


For women are as roses, whose fair flow'r


Being once display'd doth fall that very hour.


(Study and research guide)


The only mention of his wife in Shakespeare's will is the famous bequest of his "second best bed." Whether as a fond remembrance or a bitter slight is not known.


Children


Whatever subsequent feelings, on May 26, 1583 their first daughter Susanna was baptised. Two years later twins were also born, Hamnet and Judith. The twins were most likely named after Hamnet and Judith Sadler, apparently lifetime friends to Shakespeare and remembered in his will.


It is usually assumed by scholars that Shakespeare resided in Stratford at the Henley street residence these years, at least through 1585, but his manner of life and activities are not known and have become the subject of many speculations. (Website)


Death 1616


Undoubtedly Shakespeare's son-in-law, Dr. Hall, attended him at his death. The nature of his final illness is remains unknown. A legend has grown up based on an entry in John Ward, a Stratford vicar's diary. Ward wrote that "Shakspear Drayton and Ben Jhonson had a merry meeting and it seems drank too hard for Shakespear died of a feavour there contracted." The problem is that the report came from a diary half a century after Shakespeare's death, and cannot be confirmed otherwise (Website 2). Undoubtedly Ward was a local gossip and knew Judith Shakespeare in her later years, but we cannot know if this story amounts to anything more than just and idle rumor.


Shakespeare died on April 23, 1616 and was buried in the chancel of Holy Trinity Church April 25. On the slab over his grave appear the words:


GOOD FREND FOR JESUS SAKE FORBEARE,


TO DIGG THE DUST ENCLOASED HEARE.


BLESTE BE Ye MAN Yt SPARES THES STONES,


AND CURST BE HE Yt MOVES MY BONES.


To this day, the inscription mentioned has been honored, and Shakespeare�s body remains at rest.


Conclusion


Shakespeare lead a very interesting and eventful life. This report helped to inform about the life that he lead, yet it is only able to scratch the surface of the events that he influenced in his lifetime. Shakespeare managed to impact thousands of people by turning theatre into a respectable and admirable profession instead of a discriminated one. At the same time, he created many works that remain to be arguably the best ever written. His writings continue to be a benchmark in modern theatre, which are yet to be surpassed.


Bibliography


Bergeron, Sousa. Shakespeare: A Study and Research Guide. New York: Del Publishing Co., 1973.


Schoenbaum, Arthur. William Shakespeare: A Documentary Life. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson., 1968


The Complete Works of Shakespeare. 2 May 1999


The Shakespeare Quarterly. The Shakespeare Association of America. 29 April 1999


�Shakespeare, William�. Encarta 95. CD-ROM. Microsoft, 1995.


Dr. M. Cooper provides research and term paper assistance at http://www.TermPaperAdvisor and http://www.TermPapersMadeEasy.com.


For more information about Shakespeare, please visit:


 http://www.shakespeare-macbeth.com


 


Comment by Dave Nalle
Shouldn't the name be in public domain since it originates in Scandinavian mythology and is then repeated in Shakespeare's MacBeth? Dave

Yahoo! News - 101 ways to massacre Shakespeare (Reuters)
Reuters - Bouncy Castle Hamlet, Macbeth with a Sinatra soundtrack, Shakespeare for Breakfast with free coffee and croissants.

untitled
The last word on Tom Cruise: "It is a tale Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury; Signifying nothing." ATTRIBUTION: William Shakespeare Macbeth, in Macbeth, act 5, sc. 5.


It's a new season, from 'Macbeth' to 'Bye Bye Birdie'
Speaking of Shakespeare, here's what the Seattle Shakespeare Company has lined up for its 2006-07 season.

untitled
The last word on Tom Cruise: "It is a tale Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury; Signifying nothing." ATTRIBUTION: William Shakespeare Macbeth, in Macbeth, act 5, sc. 5.

Sunday, December 10, 2006


Shakespeare and Human Nature
Author: C. Bailey-Lloyd

Isn't it peculiar how human nature evolves through environmental and socialogical conditions? It is evident that we, as Human beings, tend to characterize our capabilities, strengths and emotional intelligence through bonds of society. As we encounter diverse walks of life we have a bizarre and acute tendency to create new personalities. Through human nature, we unintentionally become one with our counterparts. One can travel East to West, North to South and eventually evolution of the mind and soul takes its natural course.


Although differences exist, we enable ourselves to find common bonds of life in general. In doing so, we can interrelate with each other and attain goals that apart, are seemingly impossible. In doing so, great undertakings are initiated. We revolutionize our world through interaction and coexistence.


Even the most minute action creates an affect. In human nature, we attract those that mirror ourselves in small ways. By relating to past and present circumstances, we shape our world of tomorrow. Like clay, we mold ourselves to the structures that be. Perhaps chameleons display the best sense of human nature as they cleverly and instantaneously blend with their surroundings. Not only is this an excellent manuever to avoid danger, it is also a profound way to "fit in" and become one with its immediate environment.


Human nature never ceases amazement. We nurture ourselves with spirituality, duality and even complacency at times, but throughout life , we always manage to grow from our experiences. We learn acceptance and emotional understanding through our compelling desire to "be." Shakespeare's haunting & elusive words, "...to be or not to be...that is the question..." is the most profound phrase in human history. All human nature revolves around this particular piece of artistry - "...to be or not to be..." Shakespeare querried all Mankind.


Human nature is intriquitely defined by its owner. If we wish to merely exist, then exist we do. But if we take his question to a higher state of mind, we find life's perfect answer: Mankind's nature is to evolve. Not only to simply exist but to assure nonextinction of our species. We must use our natural instincts and capabilities to overcome and conquer. That, as in all things, must mature and ripen to a state of wholeness. Human nature may fool those and lure unsuspecting travelers of time, but the higher truth of human nature is the self exploration of life and the ability to broaden horizons of the self or "alter ego" and other individuals so they, too may come to see and equally realize the unequivocal and honest meaning of life.


Yes, Shakespeare conquered literature with his defined works of human nature; but the question he asks of us still confuses even the most intelligent and collegiate individuals of our time. In this day and age, we have a choice "to be or not to be." This is no longer an inquiry but an option. We, as Humans, must choose the path of higher truth and awareness. By remaining unattached, we choose not to fully exist. A play of words can tantalize the senses, but Human nature can enrich the world in which we live. The choice is yours.


01/2003


C. Bailey-Lloyd
aka. LadyCamelot
Public Relations' Director & Staff Writer for Holistic Junction - Your Source for information on Massage Therapy Schools, Holistic Practitioners, Alternative Health, Insightful literature and more!


For more information about Shakespeare, please visit: http://www.shakespeare-macbeth.com


 


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Shakespeare 's Sonnet XVIII, Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer's Day?
Author: Garry Gamber

Shakespeare�s sonnets require time and effort to appreciate. Understanding the numerous meanings of the lines, the crisply made references, the brilliance of the images, and the complexity of the sound, rhythm and structure of the verse demands attention and experience. The rewards are plentiful as few writers have ever approached the richness of Shakespeare�s prose and poetry.


�Sonnet XVIII� is also known as, �Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer�s Day?� It was written around 1599 and published with over 150 other sonnets in 1609 by Thomas Thorpe.


The first 126 sonnets are written to a youth, a boy, probably about 19, and perhaps specifically, William Herbert, Earl of Pembroke. His initials, W.H., appear in Thorpe�s dedication, and the first volume of Shakespeare�s plays, published by two of his fellow actors, Herminge and Condell, after Shakespeare�s death, was dedicated to William Herbert.


�Sonnet XVIII� is one of the most famous of all of Shakespeare�s sonnets. It is written in the sonnet style that Shakespeare preferred, 14 lines long with three quatrains (four rhymed lines) and a couplet (a pair of rhymed lines).


The Sonnet praises the youth�s beauty and disposition, comparing and contrasting the youth to a summer day. Then the sonnet immortalizes the youth through the �eternal lines� of the sonnet.


First Quatrain


The first line announces the comparison of the youth with a summer day. But the second line says that the youth is more perfect than a summer day. �More temperate� can be interpreted as more gentle. A summer day can have excesses such as rough winds. In Shakespeare�s time May was considered a summer month, a reference in the third line. The fourth line contains the metaphor that summer holds a lease on the year, but the lease is of a short duration.


Second Quatrain


This quatrain details how the summer can be imperfect, traits that the youth does not possess. The fifth line personifies the sun as �the eye of heaven� which is sometimes too scorchingly hot. On the other hand, �his gold complexion,� the face of the sun, can be dimmed by overcast and clouds. According to line 7, all beautiful things (fair means beautiful) sometimes decline from their state of beauty or perfection by chance accidents or by natural events. �Untrimmed� in line 8 means a lack of decoration and perhaps refers to every beauty from line 7.


Third Quatrain


This quatrain explains that the youth will possess eternal beauty and perfection. In line 10 �ow�st� is short for ownest, meaning possess. In other words, the youth �shall not lose any of your beauty.� Line 11 says that death will not conquer life and may refer to the shades of classical literature (Virgil�s Aeneid) who wander helplessly in the underworld. In line 12 �eternal lines� refers to the undying lines of the sonnet. Shakespeare realized that the sonnet is able to achieve an eternal status, and that one could be immortalized within it.


The Final Couplet


The couplet is easy to interpret. For as long as humans live and breathe on earth with eyes that can see, this is how long these verses will live. And these verses celebrate the youth and continually renew the youth's life.


�Shall I Compare Thee� is one of the most often quoted sonnets of Shakespeare. It is complex, yet elegant and memorable, and can be quoted by men and women alike. It has been enjoyed by all generations since Shakespeare and will continue to be enjoyed �so long as men can breathe, or eyes can see.�


Sonnet XVIII, Shall I Compare Thee?
By William Shakespeare


Shall I compare thee to a Summer's day?
Thou are more lovely and more temperate:
Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May,
And Summer's lease hath all too short a date:
Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines,
And often is his gold complexion dimm'd;
And every fair from fair sometime declines,
By chance or nature's changing course untrimm'd:
But thy eternal Summer shall not fade
Nor lose possession of that fair thou ow'st;
Nor shall Death brag thou wander'st in his shade,
When in eternal lines to time thou grow'st:
So long as men can breathe, or eyes can see,
So long lives this, and this gives life to thee.


*****************************


Garry Gamber is a public school teacher. He writes articles about politics, real estate, health and nutrition, and internet dating services. He is the owner of http://www.Anchorage-Homes.com and http://www.TheDatingAdvisor.com.


For more information about Shakespeare, please visit: http://www.shakespeare-macbeth.com


 


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Comment by Dave Nalle
Shouldn't the name be in public domain since it originates in Scandinavian mythology and is then repeated in Shakespeare's MacBeth? Dave

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