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The Year of Lear : Shakespeare in 1606 PDF

342 Pages·2016·10.43 MB·English
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Thank you for downloading this Simon & Schuster eBook. Join our mailing list and get updates on new releases, deals, bonus content and other great books from Simon & Schuster. CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP or visit us online to sign up at eBookNews.SimonandSchuster.com Contents List of Illustrations A Note on Quoting the Plays Map of Shakespeare’s London c.1606 Prologue: January 5, 1606 1. The King’s Man 2. Division of the Kingdoms 3. From Leir to Lear 4. Possession 5. The Letter 6. Massing Relics 7. Remember, Remember 8. Hymenaei 9. Equivocation 10. Another Hell Above the Ground 11. The King’s Evil 12. Unfinished Business 13. Queen of Sheba 14. Plague Epilogue: December 26, 1606 Photographs A Note on Dating the Plays Acknowledgments About James Shapiro Bibliographical Essay Index Image Credits For Mary and Luke List of Illustrations ILLUSTRATIONS IN THE TEXT Shakespeare’s portrait, by Martin Droeshout (1623) Title Page of the Quarto of King Leir (1605) ‘The Unite’ Coin, minted in 1604 Title Page of the Quarto of King Lear (1608) “Demonic Possession,” Pierre Boaistuau, Histoires Prodigieuses (1598) The Monteagle Letter (1605) Detail from “A Map of Warwickshire,” by John Speed (c. 1610) The Gunpowder Plotters, by Crispijn de Passe the Elder (1606) Le Combat à la Barrière, by Jacques Callot (1627) Title Page of “A Treatise of Equivocation,” by Henry Garnet (c. 1598) Detail from “The Powder Treason” (c. 1620) Henry IV of France Touching for Scrofula, by Pierre Firens (c. 1610) Lady Anne Clifford as Cleopatra (c. 1610) Tomb of Queen Elizabeth in Westminster Abbey, after Maximilian Colt (c. 1620) “Lord Have Mercy on Us,” from Thomas Dekker, A Rod for Runawayes (1625) Final Page of the Quarto of King Lear (1608) PLATE SECTION 1 King James 2 A View of London from Southwark 3 King Christian of Denmark 4 Queen Anne 5 The Execution of the Gunpowder Plotters 6 The Execution of the Gunpowder Plotters 7 The Powder Treason 8 Shakespeare, the Chandos Portrait 9 Ben Jonson 10 Lancelot Andrewes 11 Richard Burbage 12 Robert Cecil, Earl of Salisbury 13 Sir John Harington 14 Designs for the First Union Flag 15 Lucy Russell, Countess of Bedford 16 Effigy of Catherine of Valois (Queen of Henry V) A Note on Quoting the Plays Quotations from Shakespeare’s plays—with the exception of King Lear—are cited from David Bevington, ed., The Complete Works of Shakespeare, 6th ed. (New York, 2008). For King Lear I quote from Stanley Wells’s edition, based on a text prepared by Gary Taylor (Oxford, 2000), that derives from the 1608 quarto and so is closer to what was staged in 1606 (and is divided into twenty- four scenes, rather than five acts). Like almost all recent editors, Bevington and Wells modernize Shakespeare’s spelling and punctuation; I’ve done the same with the words of Shakespeare’s contemporaries throughout the book.

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Preeminent Shakespeare scholar James Shapiro shows how the tumultuous events in England in 1606 affected Shakespeare and shaped the three great tragedies he wrote that year—King Lear, Macbeth, and Antony and Cleopatra.In the years leading up to 1606, since the death of Queen Elizabeth and the arri
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