William ShakespeareWilliam Shakespeare, a name that needs no recognition, was the greatest dramatist of English literature. However, very few facts about his life are recorded, even if that is also a guess and not certain. There is no authentic biography of Shakespeare available. Shakespeare was born on April 23 1564 in Stratford, Warwickshire. Both his father, John Shakespeare and his mother, Mary Arden, were uneducated. In his early life, perhaps Shakespeare attained grammar school where he learnt some Latin and Greek. It is considered that he never went to high school or college. Nature was his teacher, and he had a deep insight through which he learned human nature. His works were mostly based on his imagination and his perception and experience of human life. When he was 14, due to his family's economic crisis, he had to leave his school to do some job to support his family. It is not clear what kind of job he had done. There is speculation that perhaps he was a school teacher or clerk of a lawyer. Shakespeare Married LifeShakespeare married Anne Hathaway when he was 18 years old and she was 26. On November 27, 1582, the Diocese of Worcester's consistory court granted a permit for marriage. Two of Hathaway's neighbours placed bonds the following day ensuring that no legitimate claims would prevent the marriage. The Worcester chancellor allowed the marriage banns to be read once rather than the customary three times, and six months after the wedding, Anne gave birth to a daughter, Susanna, who was baptised on May 26, 1583, suggesting that the ceremony may have been planned in some haste. Nearly two years later, son Hamnet and daughter Judith, who were twins, were baptised on February 2, 1585. At the age of 11, Hamnet passed away from unexplained circumstances and was buried on August 11, 1596. Shakespeare left little historical traces after the twins were born, and it wasn't until 1592 that he is acknowledged in connection with the London theatre scene. One exception is that his name can be found in the "complaints bill" of a legal proceeding before the Queen's Bench court in Westminster from the Michaelmas Term of 1588 and October 9 1589. Many spurious legends have been recorded by biographers who are seeking to explain this period. Shakespeare's first biographer, Nicholas Rowe, recalled a local rumour that the playwright left Stratford for London to avoid being charged with deer poaching on the property of the town squire Thomas Lucy. Shakespeare is said to have written a malicious poem about Lucy as retaliation for her behaviour. Shakespeare reportedly began his theatrical career in London by caring for theatregoers' horses. This is according to a different 18th-century tale. Shakespeare was a village schoolteacher, according to John Aubrey. According to several 20th-century academics, Alexander Hoghton of Lancashire, a Catholic landowner who left a specific "William Shakeshafte" in his bequest, may have hired Shakespeare as a schoolteacher. As Shakeshafte was a well-known name in the Lancashire region, there isn't much evidence to support such claims other than hearsay gathered after his death. In London, he started his career as a helper in the theatre where he used to see the horses of the royal man, but soon he became an actor in Burbage's company. Only after 2 years, he started his work on writing plays. In starting, he worked with other writers and learnt the practical knowledge of writing. Then he started his writing with Love's Labour Lost and other early and immature plays. Gradually he attained maturity in writing and wrote the greatest plays of English drama. Shakespeare also wrote poetry and sonnets. His poetry Venus and Adonis, which was dedicated to the Earl of Southampton, became very popular. For this, he got a big amount of money that he invested in theatres and became a shareholder of Globe and Blackfriars theatres. In 1597 Shakespeare purchased the largest and finest house in Stratford. Afterwards, he also added some more property to extend his land, and finally, after retirement in 1611, he left London and settled in his home town, Stratford. In the last years of his life, he wrote some plays that show a decline in his writings. He died on his birth anniversary on April 23 1616. Some lines mention his tomb; I am giving below: Good friend for Jesus' sake forbear To dig the dust enclosed here; Blest be the man that spares these stones, And crust be he that moves my bones. Shakespeare's tomb is considered a pilgrimage as thousands of his admirers come to Stratford to visit his tomb. Shakespeare never collected his work for publishing. He never thought that his plays were the greatest plays ever written. He always wrote to satisfy the audience, which was his primary motive. He faced his contemporary audience, answered its needs, and contrived a drama that the court appreciates, and the public enjoys, despite the competition of the beer gardens. After his death, Shakespeare's two fellow players gathered his work in the 'folio' of 1623 and made it published. The folio consists of thirty-six plays. Works of ShakespeareShakespeare's works were written between the years 1588 to 1612. As he is the greatest dramatist of English literature, his highest achievement lies in the area of drama. However, Shakespeare has also written poems and sonnets, which have possessed a high place in the respective area. Shakespeare's work's life is divided into four periods.
Apart from these dramas or plays, Shakespeare has also written non-dramatic poetry and sonnets. His two non-dramatic poems Venus and Adonis and The Rape of Lucrece, both are narrative. Shakespeare wrote a total of 154 sonnets. His sonnets are autobiographical as all are written about his friend and about a dark lady who is her beloved but betrayed him for his friend. Shakespeare's Historical PlaysIt is also an important group of plays written in the different periods of Shakespeare's dramatic career. In his historical plays, Shakespeare covers the period of 350 years (1200-1550) of English history. According to Prof. Dowden, the theme of the historical plays is 'How a man may fail and how a man may succeed in attaining a practical mastery of the world". Chronologically these plays are Henry VI (part I, II and III), Richard III, Richard II, King John, Henry IV (part I and II), Henry V, and Henry VIII. These historical plays, Henry IV, part I and II, are one of Shakespeare's greatest works. Characteristics of Shakespeare's historical plays
The Conception of Comedy and the Nature of Shakespearean ComedyComedy is also a kind of drama with humour, pleasure, joy, satire, romantic love, and finally ending happily. Although there is some adversity that the characters have to face, finally, all ends happily. Shakespearean comedies are romantic comedies. It is a story of love, marriage, wit, humour, joy, light satire, irony, etc. Shakespeare's comedies can be classified into different parts like
Characteristic of Shakespearean Comedy
The Conception of Tragedies and the Nature of Shakespearean TragediesThe tragedy is a tale of death and suffering. It is a story of a good or great man, who suffers mentally and spiritually due to some flaw in his character and finally meets his doom and death. According to Aristotle, "tragedy is an imitation of an action that is serious, complete and of a certain magnitude….. in the form of action and not of narration; through pity and fear affecting the proper purgation of these emotions." Shakespearean tragedies are also a tale of death and suffering, and even it is more than that. His tragedies do not show only pictures of the sufferings of the hero and heroine but also exhibit man's unsuccessful conflict with circumstances. The Shakespearean hero develops by the interaction of other characters in the play or by the struggle against certain circumstances and situations which are created purposely to give a chance to the hero to rise to the fullest heights as well as to sink to the lowest ebbs. Shakespearean tragic heroes die a glorious & honourable death; they are great in life as well as in death. The main cause of tragedy in Shakespeare's play is a fatal flaw in the character of a hero or heroine. The fatal flaw in the character is not a big fault or a vice of the character, but it is just the weakness of the character which due to the adverse circumstances becomes the cause of tragedy like Hamlet's tragedy is his vacillating nature, Macbeth's overweening ambition become the cause of his tragedy, the suspicious nature of Othello and rash nature of Lear was the cause of their tragedy. Shakespeare wrote many tragedies in different periods of his career. Name of the tragedies he wrote are Richard III, Richard II, Romeo and Juliet, Julius Caesar, Antony and Cleopatra, Timon of Athens and Coriolanus, and the four great tragedies, Hamlet, Othello, Macbeth, and King Lear. The themes of the tragedies are conflicts between good and evil, resulting in suffering and death. One another common theme in all Shakespeare's great tragedies is melodramatic scenes like the ghost, the madness or semi-madness of Hamlet, Lear, or Ophelia, the graveyard scene in Hamlet and the witches and numerous murders in Macbeth, the drunken scenes and riot in Othello, etc. Important Characteristics of Shakespearean TragediesSome Important Characteristics of Shakespearean Tragedies are as follows:
Additional Factors in Shakespeare's Tragic Plays are;
Examples of External Conflicts are Romeo & Juliet and Richard II.
Shakespeare's Dramatic Romances and Last PlaysShakespeare's last plays include Pericles, Cymbeline, The Winter's Tale, and The Tempest. However, these plays show the decline of Shakespeare's dramatic power, although, in this phase, his philosophical genius was at its highest. Characteristics of Dramatic Romances
The Conception of Sonnets and Shakespearean SonnetsA sonnet is defined as a short poem consisting of fourteen lines with a particular rhyme scheme that expresses a single emotion and idea. Traditionally there are two forms of sonnets; the Petrarchan sonnet is made up of two parts, the first one is an octave consisting of eight lines, and the second one is a sestet consisting of six lines. The rhyme scheme of the octave is abba, abba, and the sestet is cdcdee, cadence. The Shakespearean sonnet is made up of three quatrains of four lines, each ending with an independent couplet. The rhyme scheme of the Shakespearean sonnet is abab, cdcd, efef, gg. One another kind of sonnet developed by Edmund Spenser is called the Spenserian sonnet. The rhyme scheme of the Spenserian sonnet is abab, bcbc, cdcd, ee. Shakespeare has written a total of 154 sonnets, which were written in the years 1592, 1597 and 1598, but published after 1609. These sonnets were published by Thomas Thorpe, who got the manuscripts of the sonnets from Mr W.H. Actually, this Mr W.H. was the man to whom Shakespeare most of the sonnets are addressed. However, there is no certain identity of this man. This man may be his brother-in-law, William Hathaway, maybe William Herbert, third Earl of Pembroke, and William Hall, a printer, and some more, but one person the young lord, the third Earl of Southampton, namely Henry Wriothesley, widely accepted that man to whom Shakespeare's sonnets are addressed. Further, Shakespeare's sonnets are in two groups; in one group, we can place sonnets 1-126, which are addressed to the Earl of Southampton, and in the second group, we can place sonnets 127-152, that are addressed to the dark lady whose identity is also a matter of controversy. It is considered that the lady was Mary Fitton. The last two, 153-154, describe the god of love. Some More Characteristics of Shakespearean Sonnets are:
Shakespeare is of All Ages and Shakespeare's Universality
Love looks not with the eyes, but with the mind, and therefore is winged cupid painted blind.
Shakespearean Humour
Shakespeare's Character
Shakespeare's Humanity
Shakespeare's Language & Style
Was Shakespeare Successful in His LifetimeShakespeare had achieved enough fame as a playwright and actor by 1592 for his jealous rival Robert Greene to disparage him as an "upstart crow" and "Johannes Factotum" (a "Johnny do-it-all"). A groat is a little currency. Shakespeare wrote 11 plays by 1592, including Romeo and Juliet, Richard III, and A Midsummer Night's Dream, even though it is difficult to pinpoint the order of his works. His plays were well received; the opening night box office for Henry VI, Part 1 at the Rose in 1592 was £3 16 8d, the highest ever recorded for the season. The epidemic caused the London playhouses to be closed for a significant portion of the time between September 1592 and June 1594. Venus and Adonis and The Rape of Lucrece are two epic poems by Shakespeare that were released at this time. Through the 1590s, Shakespeare's popularity increased. Along with composing other plays, he joined and became a shareholder in Lord Chamberlain's Men, who frequently appeared before Queen Elizabeth. He also published several poems and distributed the unpublished sonnet series. His achievements allowed him to purchase New Place, Stratford's second-largest home, in 1597. However, this achievement was not without tragedy: in 1596, his 11-year-old son Hamnet passed away. DeathShakespeare reportedly passed away on April 23, 1616, when he was reportedly 52 years old. This day also happened to be St. George's Day, celebrated in England. He signed a will a month before he passed away, stating that he was in "perfect health" at the outset. No surviving source from his time tells how or why he passed away. Shakespeare, Drayton, and Ben Jonson had a good time together and, it seems, drank too much because Shakespeare passed away from a fever there after half a century, the vicar of Stratford, John Ward, noted in his journal. Shakespeare knew Jonson and Drayton; thus, it is probable that he developed a fever due to that encounter. Shakespeare's comparatively quick passing is mentioned in one of the tributes that began to flow from other writers and were reproduced in the First Folio. It reads, "We wondered, Shakespeare, that thou wentest so soon / From the world's stage to the grave's tiring room." Shakespeare left behind two daughters, Susanna and Judith, and his wife, Anne. Hamnet, his son, had perished in 1596. Elizabeth Hall, a granddaughter of Susanna and John Hall, was his last surviving descendent. Shakespeare has no direct living descendants, but the diarist John Aubrey recalled in his Brief Lives that his godson, William Davenant, "contented" to be considered Shakespeare's true son. Shakespeare would stay at the Crown Tavern in Oxford, on the route between London and Stratford, when he was going between his home in Stratford and the city, and Davenant's mother was the wife of a vintner there. Shakespeare is buried in the Holy Trinity Church in Stratford-upon-Avon's chancel. He was given the privilege of being buried in the chancel, not because of his popularity as a dramatist but because he had paid £440 (a sizeable sum of money at the time) to buy a share of the church's tithe. Shakespeare is depicted in a bust, writing on a wall monument possibly erected by his family next to his grave. A fresh quill pen is always inserted into the bust's writing hand on the fictitious occasion of his birthday. On his tombstone, the epitaph is thought to have been inscribed. ConclusionWilliam Shakespeare's life was a surprising journey that changed the world of literature and theatre. Brought into the world in 1564, he turned into a popular writer, poet, and entertainer in Elizabethan England. Shakespeare's works, including his plays and poems, showed an unmatched dominance of language, feeling, and human instinct. His plays, like Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet, and Macbeth, keep on enamouring crowds worldwide with their ageless topics and complex characters. Shakespeare's productive profession and significant impact on English literature have set his status as the best writer ever. His heritage perseveres, with his works being examined, performed, and celebrated hundreds of years after his passing in 1616. Next TopicMS Dhoni |