Date:1602
Description:A Shakespeare source in England’s mediaeval poetry. Geoffrey Chaucer’s works, written in the time of Richard II, at the end of the 13th century, were known and admired by Elizabethan contemporaries such as Edmund Spenser, author of The Faerie Queene. Shakespeare used ideas found in Chaucer for his own work, including the story of Ariadne and Dido in 'The Legend of Good Women' for a reference in The Merchant of Venice ‘In such a night stood Dido with a willow in her hand.’ (5,1, lines 9-12). Full title: Geoffrey Chaucer, Workes, London, Adam Islip, 1602.
The timeline shows resources around this location over a number of years.
Shakespeare may have owned this book. Shakespeare purchased New Place, the largest ...
Shakespeare’s first published works. The long poem, Venus and Adonis, was ...
Warwickshire, and Shakespeare's ‘merrie meeting’. According to John ...
A Shakespeare collaboration. The Two Noble Kinsmen includes pageantry in the ...
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Donor ref:SR/OS95.2 [37,835] (32/10573)
Source: The Shakespeare Birthplace Trust - Library
Copyright information: Copyrights to all resources are retained by the individual rights holders. They have kindly made their collections available for non-commercial private study & educational use. Re-distribution of resources in any form is only permitted subject to strict adherence to the usage guidelines.