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            <![CDATA[ 5 Shakespeare Plays That are Worth Reading ]]>
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            <![CDATA[ https://www.frontlist.in/%20https://www.frontlist.in/public/index.php/5-shakespeare-plays-that-are-worth-reading ]]>
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            <![CDATA[ <em>“This above all: to thine own self be true, And it must follow, as the night the day,
Thou canst not then be false to any man.” - Shakespeare</em>

Here are 5 plays of William Shakespeare that you should read cause it's worth it.

&nbsp;

<span style=font-weight: 400;>Romeo and Juliet<img class=alignleft size-full wp-image-15623 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/download-16.jpg alt= width=183 height=275 /> </span>

<span style=font-weight: 400;>The most famous scene in this play, written in the mid-1590s, is the ‘balcony’ scene – though </span><span style=font-weight: 400;>there has been some debate</span><span style=font-weight: 400;> about whether it would have originally contained a balcony when originally performed. (Shakespeare simply has Juliet appearing ‘at a window’ in the stage directions.) Nevertheless, Romeo and Juliet has captured the world’s imagination as a classic tale of doomed young lovers (though the story, as with most of Shakespeare’s plays, wasn’t originated by the Bard himself, but adapted from earlier sources). Thousands of Valentines are written to ‘Juliet’ each year in Verona.</span>

&nbsp;

&nbsp;

<span style=font-weight: 400;><img class=alignleft size-full wp-image-15624 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/download-17.jpg alt= width=178 height=283 />Macbeth</span>

<span style=font-weight: 400;>Based on a real king and queen of Scotland named Mac Bethad mac Findlaích and Gruoch, Macbeth was composed shortly after the Gunpowder Plot of November 1605, the Catholic conspiracy to blow up the Houses of Parliament in London and, with them, King James I of England. James, of course, was already King James VI of Scotland when he came to the English throne in 1603, and he claimed descent from Banquo – hence the prophecy surrounding Banquo’s descendants in the play. In 1849, the play </span><span style=font-weight: 400;>caused a riot in New York</span><span style=font-weight: 400;>, which arose after two rival actors fell out.</span>

&nbsp;

&nbsp;

&nbsp;

<span style=font-weight: 400;><img class=alignleft size-full wp-image-15625 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/download-18.jpg alt= width=178 height=283 />King Lear</span>

<span style=font-weight: 400;>This play, which opens with the titular king preparing to divide his kingdom up between his three daughters Regan, Goneril, and Cordelia, was based on an earlier play about ‘King Leir’, king of ancient Britain. In the original chronicle on which that earlier play was itself based, </span><span style=font-weight: 400;>the story has a happy ending</span><span style=font-weight: 400;> – but Shakespeare saw the potential for tragedy in this tale of parents, children, siblings, and civil war. The play also, somewhat pleasingly, contains the </span><span style=font-weight: 400;>earliest known reference to a ‘football player’</span><span style=font-weight: 400;> – though footballers weren’t paid nearly as much in Shakespeare’s day.</span>

&nbsp;

&nbsp;

&nbsp;

<span style=font-weight: 400;><img class=alignleft wp-image-15626 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/41ZprmZ5KqL-188x300.jpg alt= width=174 height=278 />Hamlet. </span>

<span style=font-weight: 400;>Based on an earlier play, now sadly lost, Hamlet is often considered Shakespeare’s masterpiece. It certainly marked a turning point in his development as a playwright, seen in the more intense and psychologically complex soliloquies spoken by the title character. Composed in around 1600-1, Hamlet has </span><span style=font-weight: 400;>received the somewhat unusual honour of being translated into Klingon</span><span style=font-weight: 400;>. The Klingon Hamlet, whose full title is The Tragedy of Khamlet, Son of the Emperor of Qo’noS, was translated by Nick Nicholas and Andrew Strader of the ‘Klingon Shakespeare Restoration Project’, using the fictional language from the television series Star Trek. Is this Shakespeare’s best play of all? T. S. Eliot didn’t think so, as </span><span style=font-weight: 400;>he argued in his 1919 essay on Hamlet</span><span style=font-weight: 400;>.</span>

&nbsp;

<span style=font-weight: 400;><img class=alignleft wp-image-15627 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/download-19.jpg alt= width=171 height=224 />The Tempest</span><span style=font-weight: 400;> </span>

<span style=font-weight: 400;>Often read as </span><span style=font-weight: 400;>Shakespeare’s farewell to the London stage</span><span style=font-weight: 400;>, this play was first performed in 1611 and was, indeed, the last play Shakespeare wrote entirely on his own. After writing this play about a shipwreck and a magical island, Shakespeare went on to collaborate with John Fletcher on several plays, including Henry VIII, The Two Noble Kinsmen, and the lost play Cardenio, based on a story from Cervantes’ Don Quixote.</span>

&nbsp;

&nbsp;

<span style=font-weight: 400;>Source: </span><span style=font-weight: 400;>Interesting Literature</span>

&nbsp; ]]>
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        <pubDate>Mon, 07 05, 2021 12:22 pm</pubDate>
        <item>
            <title>
                <![CDATA[ 5 Shakespeare Plays That are Worth Reading ]]>
            </title>
            <link><![CDATA[ https://www.frontlist.in/%20https://www.frontlist.in/public/index.php/5-shakespeare-plays-that-are-worth-reading ]]></link>
            <description>
                <![CDATA[ <em>“This above all: to thine own self be true, And it must follow, as the night the day,
Thou canst not then be false to any man.” - Shakespeare</em>

Here are 5 plays of William Shakespeare that you should read cause it's worth it.

&nbsp;

<span style=font-weight: 400;>Romeo and Juliet<img class=alignleft size-full wp-image-15623 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/download-16.jpg alt= width=183 height=275 /> </span>

<span style=font-weight: 400;>The most famous scene in this play, written in the mid-1590s, is the ‘balcony’ scene – though </span><span style=font-weight: 400;>there has been some debate</span><span style=font-weight: 400;> about whether it would have originally contained a balcony when originally performed. (Shakespeare simply has Juliet appearing ‘at a window’ in the stage directions.) Nevertheless, Romeo and Juliet has captured the world’s imagination as a classic tale of doomed young lovers (though the story, as with most of Shakespeare’s plays, wasn’t originated by the Bard himself, but adapted from earlier sources). Thousands of Valentines are written to ‘Juliet’ each year in Verona.</span>

&nbsp;

&nbsp;

<span style=font-weight: 400;><img class=alignleft size-full wp-image-15624 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/download-17.jpg alt= width=178 height=283 />Macbeth</span>

<span style=font-weight: 400;>Based on a real king and queen of Scotland named Mac Bethad mac Findlaích and Gruoch, Macbeth was composed shortly after the Gunpowder Plot of November 1605, the Catholic conspiracy to blow up the Houses of Parliament in London and, with them, King James I of England. James, of course, was already King James VI of Scotland when he came to the English throne in 1603, and he claimed descent from Banquo – hence the prophecy surrounding Banquo’s descendants in the play. In 1849, the play </span><span style=font-weight: 400;>caused a riot in New York</span><span style=font-weight: 400;>, which arose after two rival actors fell out.</span>

&nbsp;

&nbsp;

&nbsp;

<span style=font-weight: 400;><img class=alignleft size-full wp-image-15625 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/download-18.jpg alt= width=178 height=283 />King Lear</span>

<span style=font-weight: 400;>This play, which opens with the titular king preparing to divide his kingdom up between his three daughters Regan, Goneril, and Cordelia, was based on an earlier play about ‘King Leir’, king of ancient Britain. In the original chronicle on which that earlier play was itself based, </span><span style=font-weight: 400;>the story has a happy ending</span><span style=font-weight: 400;> – but Shakespeare saw the potential for tragedy in this tale of parents, children, siblings, and civil war. The play also, somewhat pleasingly, contains the </span><span style=font-weight: 400;>earliest known reference to a ‘football player’</span><span style=font-weight: 400;> – though footballers weren’t paid nearly as much in Shakespeare’s day.</span>

&nbsp;

&nbsp;

&nbsp;

<span style=font-weight: 400;><img class=alignleft wp-image-15626 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/41ZprmZ5KqL-188x300.jpg alt= width=174 height=278 />Hamlet. </span>

<span style=font-weight: 400;>Based on an earlier play, now sadly lost, Hamlet is often considered Shakespeare’s masterpiece. It certainly marked a turning point in his development as a playwright, seen in the more intense and psychologically complex soliloquies spoken by the title character. Composed in around 1600-1, Hamlet has </span><span style=font-weight: 400;>received the somewhat unusual honour of being translated into Klingon</span><span style=font-weight: 400;>. The Klingon Hamlet, whose full title is The Tragedy of Khamlet, Son of the Emperor of Qo’noS, was translated by Nick Nicholas and Andrew Strader of the ‘Klingon Shakespeare Restoration Project’, using the fictional language from the television series Star Trek. Is this Shakespeare’s best play of all? T. S. Eliot didn’t think so, as </span><span style=font-weight: 400;>he argued in his 1919 essay on Hamlet</span><span style=font-weight: 400;>.</span>

&nbsp;

<span style=font-weight: 400;><img class=alignleft wp-image-15627 src=https://www.frontlist.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/download-19.jpg alt= width=171 height=224 />The Tempest</span><span style=font-weight: 400;> </span>

<span style=font-weight: 400;>Often read as </span><span style=font-weight: 400;>Shakespeare’s farewell to the London stage</span><span style=font-weight: 400;>, this play was first performed in 1611 and was, indeed, the last play Shakespeare wrote entirely on his own. After writing this play about a shipwreck and a magical island, Shakespeare went on to collaborate with John Fletcher on several plays, including Henry VIII, The Two Noble Kinsmen, and the lost play Cardenio, based on a story from Cervantes’ Don Quixote.</span>

&nbsp;

&nbsp;

<span style=font-weight: 400;>Source: </span><span style=font-weight: 400;>Interesting Literature</span>

&nbsp; ]]>
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                <![CDATA[ Frontlist ]]>
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            <pubDate>Mon, 07 05, 2021 12:22 pm</pubDate>
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