Theme Explorer

Start Again > Location > Stratford upon Avon > Henley Street - Shakespeare Birthplace Trust collections
Page 18 of 20 355 Records Found

William Shakespeare, A Midsummer Night's Dream, 1600 [1619] - Puck's epilogue.

Puck, as Epilogue in A Midsummer Night’s Dream. The fairy magic of A Midsummer Night’s Dream brings the play to an end as Puck speaks the epilogue after Theseus and his newly-wed courtiers ...

William Shakespeare, A Midsummer Night's Dream, 1600 [1619] - 'Pyramus and Thisbe' play, p.H3r.

The play presented before the court in Shakespeare's A Midsummer’ Night’s Dream. The play of ‘Pyramus and Thisbe’, like the other plays presented in Shakespeare’s Love’s ...

William Shakespeare, A Midsummer Night's Dream, 1600 [1619] - quarto edition, Oberon and Puck, p.C2v.

‘I know a bank where the wild thyme blows...’. The name ‘quarto’ used for the earliest printed texts of some of Shakespeare’s most popular plays refers to the size of ...

William Shakespeare, King Lear, 1608 [1619] - p.B2rof the second quarto..

An eternal theme - bastardy and legitimacy in Shakespeare. Edmund’s evil nature is presented immediately he is alone with the audience. The conflict between legitimate and illegitimate children ...

William Shakespeare, King Lear, 1608 [1619] - p.B2r, detail, Edmund's soliloquy.

‘Thou Nature art my goddess’: evil in Shakespeare. In the 'quarto' edition Edmund, the eldest son of the Earl of Gloucester, is named Bastard in the speech headings, perhaps reflecting ...

William Shakespeare, King Lear, 1608 [1619] - quarto title page.

Title page information about Shakespeare's the play of King Lear. This 'quarto' page is from the edition with a false earlier date on the title-page, published by Thomas Pavier without the permission ...

William Shakespeare, Love's Labour's Lost, 1631 - the play ends with a song of winter

Poetry in Shakespeare's plays: ‘When icicles hang by the wall’. The play of Love’s Labour’s Lost concludes, as was the custom in many comedies of the time, with a song, in this ...

William Shakespeare, Love's Labour's Lost, 1631 - the Nine Worthies' play ends

The conclusion of a Shakespeare comedy in dance and song: Love’s Labour’s Lost. Before the winter song comes a song of summer. Both are performed at the end of the play by the group of ...

William Shakespeare, Love's Labour's Lost, 1631 - title page detail

Shakespeare’s acting company and their theatres. In Shakespeare's time companies of actors needed a patron to exist within the law. The title-page of a 'quarto' paperback edition of one of Shakespeare's ...

William Shakespeare, Mr William Shakespeares comedies, histories and tragedies..., 1623 , 'First Folio' - portrait, title page detail.

William Shakespeare 1564-1616. The portrait of William Shakespeare (1564-1616) from the title page of the first collected edition of his plays. Full title: William Shakespeare, Mr William Shakespeares ...

William Shakespeare, Mr William Shakespeares comedies, histories and tragedies..., 1623 ,'First Folio', - The Tempest, p. A1r.

Shakespeare's first and last: The Tempest. The Tempest was almost the last play written by William Shakespeare, but in the ‘Folio’ edition it appears first. There was no ‘quarto’ ...

William Shakespeare, Mr William Shakespeares comedies, histories and tragedies..., 1623 'First Folio' - Poem by Ben Jonson, p. A4 r.

Ben Jonson’s tribute to Shakespeare. Several years after William Shakespeare's death in April 1616, his fellow actors at the Globe theatre brought the texts of his plays together for publication ...

William Shakespeare, Mr William Shakespeares comedies, histories and tragedies..., 1623, 'First Folio'- detail, Ben Jonson's Poem, p. A4r.

The 'First Folio'’s commendatory poem by Ben Jonson. At the beginning of the ‘First Folio’ is a eulogy by Shakespeare’s friend, and rival playwright, Ben Jonson, who had published ...

William Shakespeare, Mr William Shakespeares comedies, histories and tragedies..., 1623, 'First Folio' - 'To be or not to be…', p.265, p.oo5r, detail.

‘To be, or not to be’: Shakespeare’s interest in mortality. Hamlet’s soliloquy beginning: ‘To be, or not to be’ (3,1, lines 58-90), in which the prince contemplates ...

William Shakespeare, Mr William Shakespeares comedies, histories and tragedies..., 1623, 'First Folio' - 'Twelfth Night', 'Illyria', p.Y2r, detail.

‘This is Illyria lady.’: The setting of Twelfth Night. Few of Shakespeare’s comedies were set in England, although it is not known if the playwright ever travelled abroad. When Viola ...

William Shakespeare, Mr William Shakespeares comedies, histories and tragedies..., 1623, 'First Folio' - binding front board

The ‘'cottage-roof'’ style binding for a Shakespeare ‘First Folio’. Lord Ashburnham’s binding for his copy of the Shakespeare 'First Folio' is simple, but elegant, created ...

William Shakespeare, Mr William Shakespeares comedies, histories and tragedies..., 1623, 'First Folio' - Commendatory letter 'to the great variety of readers', p.A3r

Shakespeare’s friends write about the ‘First Folio’. John Heminge and Henry Condell, Shakespeare's fellow members in the King's Men at the Globe wrote dedicatory and prefatory letters ...

William Shakespeare, Mr William Shakespeares comedies, histories and tragedies..., 1623, 'First Folio' - detail, Macbeth, p.131, p.II 6r.

Macbeth: Shakespeare’s ‘Scottish’ play. Macbeth, which has earned a reputation among the superstitious and has become known by many actors as ‘The Scottish play’, begins ...