William Shakespeare
William Shakespeare was born on April 23, 1564, in
Stratford-upon-Avon. The son of John Shakespeare and Mary Arden, he was
probably educated at the King Edward VI Grammar School in Stratford, where he
learned Latin and a little Greek and read the Roman dramatists. At eighteen, he
married Anne Hathaway, a woman seven or eight years his senior. Together they
raised two daughters: Susanna, who was born in 1583, and Judith (whose twin
brother died in boyhood), born in 1585.
Little is known about Shakespeare's activities between 1585
and 1592. Robert Greene's A Groatsworth of Wit alludes to him as an actor and
playwright. Shakespeare may have taught at school during this period, but it
seems more probable that shortly after 1585 he went to London to begin his
apprenticeship as an actor. Due to the plague, the London theaters were often
closed between June 1592 and April 1594. During that period, Shakespeare
probably had some income from his patron, Henry Wriothesley, earl of
Southampton, to whom he dedicated his first two poems, Venus and Adonis (1593)
and The Rape of Lucrece (1594). The former was a long narrative poem depicting
the rejection of Venus by Adonis, his death, and the consequent disappearance
of beauty from the world. Despite conservative objections to the poem's
glorification of sensuality, it was immensely popular and was reprinted six
times during the nine years following its publication.
In 1594, Shakespeare joined the Lord Chamberlain's company
of actors, the most popular of the companies acting at Court. In 1599
Shakespeare joined a group of Chamberlain's Men that would form a syndicate to
build and operate a new playhouse: the Globe, which became the most famous
theater of its time. With his share of the income from the Globe, Shakespeare
was able to purchase New Place, his home in Stratford.
While Shakespeare was regarded as the foremost dramatist of
his time, evidence indicates that both he and his contemporaries looked to
poetry, not playwriting, for enduring fame. Shakespeare's sonnets were composed
between 1593 and 1601, though not published until 1609. That edition, The
Sonnets of Shakespeare, consists of 154 sonnets, all written in the form of
three quatrains and a couplet that is now recognized as Shakespearean. The
sonnets fall into two groups: sonnets 1-126, addressed to a beloved friend, a
handsome and noble young man, and sonnets 127-152, to a malignant but
fascinating "Dark Lady," who the poet loves in spite of himself.
Nearly all of Shakespeare's sonnets examine the inevitable decay of time, and
the immortalization of beauty and love in poetry.
In his poems and plays, Shakespeare invented thousands of
words, often combining or contorting Latin, French, and native roots. His impressive
expansion of the English language, according to the Oxford English Dictionary,
includes such words as: arch-villain, birthplace, bloodsucking, courtship,
dewdrop, downstairs, fanged, heartsore, hunchbacked, leapfrog, misquote,
pageantry, radiance, schoolboy, stillborn, watchdog, and zany.
Shakespeare wrote more than thirty plays. These are usually
divided into four categories: histories, comedies, tragedies, and romances. His
earliest plays were primarily comedies and histories such as Henry VI and The
Comedy of Errors, but in 1596, Shakespeare wrote Romeo and Juliet, his second
tragedy, and over the next dozen years he would return to the form, writing the
plays for which he is now best known: Julius Caesar, Hamlet, Othello, King
Lear, Macbeth, and Antony and Cleopatra. In his final years, Shakespeare turned
to the romantic with Cymbeline, A Winter's Tale, and The Tempest.
Only eighteen of Shakespeare's plays were published
separately in quarto editions during his lifetime; a complete collection of his
works did not appear until the publication of the First Folio in 1623, several
years after his death. Nonetheless, his contemporaries recognized Shakespeare's
achievements. Francis Meres cited "honey-tongued" Shakespeare for his
plays and poems in 1598, and the Chamberlain's Men rose to become the leading
dramatic company in London, installed as members of the royal household in
1603.
Sometime after 1612, Shakespeare retired from the stage and
returned to his home in Stratford. He drew up his will in January of 1616,
which included his famous bequest to his wife of his "second best
bed." He died on April 23, 1616, and was buried two days later at
Stratford Church.
His Works:
Sonnets - 154
Comedies
- All's Well That Ends Well
- As You Like It
- Comedy of Errors
- Love's Labour's Lost
- Measure for Measure
- Merchant of Venice
- Merry Wives of Windsor
- Midsummer Night's Dream
- Much Ado about Nothing
- Taming of the Shrew
- Tempest
- Twelfth Night
- Two Gentlemen of Verona
- Winter's Tale
- Henry IV, Part I
- Henry IV, Part II
- Henry V
- Henry VI, Part I
- Henry VI, Part II
- Henry VI, Part III
- Henry VIII
- King John
- Pericles
- Richard II
- Richard III
- Poems:
- Lover's Complaint (1609)
- Passionate Pilgrim (1598)
- Phoenix and the Turtle (1601)
- Rape of Lucrece (1594)
- Venus and Adonis (1593)
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