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Articles about Shakespeare (0-50 of 731)

  • Essay On Hamlet: Play By William Shakespeare:
    By: Sharone Williams | - Hamlet, the famous William Shakespeare play was written in between 1599 and 1601. Hamlet is one of the tragic plays of Shakespeare on the life of Prince of Denmark, Hamlet. These works of Shakespeare, still admired today, prove him a consummate dramatist. Shakespeare knows the art of changing fully dramatic scenes into external and internal conflict and emotion, which delighted the Elizabethan spectators. Writing the essay on Shakespeare plays requires enough time and sharp writing skills.

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  • English Literature Coursework On: Othello, The Moor Of Venice:
    By: mike jason | - Othello, the Moor of Venice, one of the most famous plays among the four plays of William Shakespeare, written in 1603. Students of English literature have to write coursework on Shakespeare plays in order to associate themselves from their studies; this on the other hand also helps them to enhance their writing skills. Writing a good quality coursework on Shakespeare plays is a daunting task. You will be unable to write a successful coursework that helps you to pass your exams is not an easy ta ...
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  • Love And Attraction - The Key To A Woman's Heart
    By: C Tyler | - It's a noble pursuit for any man to try and win over a woman and make her fall in love. After all, the greatest stories told in the world have generally centered around this subject. From the days of Shakespeare to the 21st century, man has always tried to figure out a way to make that one woman he has eyes for fall in love with him.

    Some do get it right on the first try, but for most men, it becomes a challenge to really comprehend the subtle nuances that cause a woman to feel that ...

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  • Essay Writing On A Shakespeare Play: King Lear:
    By: henry pollock | - King Lear, one of the conventional or classic tragedies of William Shakespeare written in twentieth century. Essay writing on Shakespeares play is not an easy task. An English literature student has to write number of essays on Shakespeares play. Mostly students due to poor English writing skills are unable to write a good and high-quality essay, which will not let them to attain good grades. For writing a successful essay on Shakespeare plays, a student must read and understand the play v ...
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  • To Have Beard Or Not To Beard
    By: Ryan Round | - On the subject of whether it is better for a man to be clean shaven or to maintain a beard and mustache, let's consider a quote from Shakespeare. In "Much Ado About Nothing" Beatrice states: "He that hath a beard is more than a youth, and he that hath no beard is less than a man."

    In general, this seems to be the predominant attitude among those who believe that there is a strong reason, even an ordained directive, governing the wearing of facial hair on men. On the weaker side i ...

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  • Good Relationship Tips
    By: Alfred Patrick | - One of the characteristics of good relationships is that they are forged between people who are authentic. What does that mean? It means embrace the wisdom of Shakespeare who wrote, 'To thine own self be true.' Fact is we get knocked off centre and lose touch with our natural self. But it's still there inside, beneath all the layers and masks that we put on to try and make ourselves more acceptable to the world.

    In the midst of these huge issues, there is also a crisis in relationsh ...

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  • The Health Benefits Of Love
    By: Pamela Cruse | - While the Shakespeare play Romeo and Juliet proved that love can be tragic and the song Love Stinks by the J. Geils band shows that love can hurt, it is important to never forget all the great things that love can do for you. It's healthy not only for your emotional and mental state, but your actual physical being. Here are some examples:
    Forever Young
    Well, maybe not literally. But the giving and receiving of love does increase the hormone DHEA, also known as the "anti-aging" hormon ...

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  • Groups Lend Capability To Make Money On The Web
    By: amrita09 | - William Shakespeare once wrote; "The world is a stage on which everyone is a player" ... and in Network Marketing, each player must play his/her part.

    To make money on the internet, working from home, you need to find the players that play their parts.

    Making money online is much easier when everyone is part of the performance...

    Groups play a large part in forming such an association. A Yahoo group is easy to form and allows communication to flow freely ...

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  • Experience Impressive West Side Story
    By: Peri Witny | - People say that West Side Story is very similar to Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet. I also think the same but in a positive way. This is a musical play which has been based on several ups and downs among the characters as well as there is an intense love story between a girl from different group and boy from another group. You would really enjoy the beautifully plot love story which touches the heart of several those people, who are really in love. You should buy West Wide Story tickets because t ...
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  • Enjoy Your Time By Getting The Hamlet Tickets Written By World Renowned Writer
    By: Azeem Ashraf | - Shakespeare is not a unknown name; in fact, it is one of those name, which is famous all over the world and people of all languages love to read and watch his play. Hamlet is also one of these plays written by the greatest writer of the west. Thats why people put all their efforts to buy hamlet tickets, because they dont want to miss this play at any cost. Shakespeare was a great writer, who was well known for writing about the realities of life, because he used to see the life from very c ...
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  • Did Shakespeare Visit Elsinore Castle In Denmark?
    By: Ryan Even | - The town of Elsinore on the East coast of Denmark attracts thousands of visitors every year. Their destination is Kronberg Castle, or "Hamlet's Castle" as it has come to be known.

    The castle was built by King Eric VII in the early fifteenth century. Its purpose was to command the narrow channel of water navigated by merchant ships on the Baltic trade routes. Each and every ship passing through the sound had to heave to at Elsinore and a tax of one English noble was levied on it.< ...

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  • Take A Short Leap To Get Your Hamlet Tickets
    By: Azeem Ashraf | - Shakespeare is a big name for everyone who had written a lot in his period which has become the history now. One of his famous masterpieces is Hamlet which bases on Tragedy and which have always presented in beautiful way as it was in future. You will get regret on not receiving its tickets for which people make too much effort to get their one ticket as soon as possible. You are not away from having Hamlet tickets for which you would be going to crazy nowadays because amazing season of this pla ...
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  • Groups Lend Capability To Make Money On The Web
    By: PRAVIN GURAV | - William Shakespeare once wrote; "The world is a stage on which everyone is a player" ... and in Network Marketing, each player must play his/her part.

    To make money on the internet, working from home, you need to find the players that play their parts.

    Making money online is much easier when everyone is part of the performance...

    Groups play a large part in forming such an association. A Yahoo group is easy to form and allows communication to flow freely ...

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  • A Successful Sales Person
    By: jsolutions | - In Hamlet, Shakespeare said it best: "Brevity is soul of wit." When marketing a particular product, a buyer will lose interest if the benefits of the solution are not expressed in a clear and concise manner. Psychologically, buyers usually have a lot on their minds (as they have their own jobs and goals too) and want to get to the point. Too much information or elaboration on a certain topic can put a sales person in a position where the client purposely avoids them due to their conversations' p ...
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  • Credit Card Help Tips To Ponder
    By: Charmaine Claveria | - Most of us are looking for a way out of debt. If you're one of those people who'd moved heaven and earth looking for credit card debt help, then the playright William Shakespeare has some parting words for those whose debt payments are monstrous: Neither a borrower nor a lender be; For loan oft loses both itself and friend. Wise words that people just seem to ignore, for in 2008, American household debts reached $13.8 trillion.
    This kind of lifestyle went on until the latter ...

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  • Social Web Results
  • Climategate: Something’s Rotten in Denmark … and East Anglia, Asheville, and New York City (PJM Exclusive) Shared By: PajamasMedia - The familiar phrase was spoken by Marcellus in Shakespeare’s Hamlet — first performed around 1600, at the start of the Little Ice Age. “Something is...

  • Shakespeare for Toddlers Shared By: tncaldwell - ' To be or not to be – that is the question. ' I guess it doesn't hurt to teach kids Shakespeare at an early age - but this is an amusing video of the...

  • Queensland Shakespeare Ensemble: Company Officers 2010 | Facebook Shared By: qldshakespeare - Artistic Director: Rob Pensalfini Core Ensemble: Andrea Carne Angel Kosch Claire Pearson Rob Pensalfini Benjamin Prindable Colin Smith Elizabeth...

  • Climate Change and Shakespeare - BusinessWeek Shared By: regnordman - What's the link between Shakespeare, consumers, and sustainability? Well, after listening to Muhtar Kent, speak at Kronborg Castle in Copenhagen, I...

  • Rockin' doggy tees, tanks & hoodies by Toru – Secret Shopper – Pet Shared By: Rebeccamo71 - We just couldn't resist trying the LOVE hoodie on our newest family member, Shakespeare, a 9 week old great Dane puppy. Housetraining a puppy with a...

  • Brian Cox Masterclass with Theo Shared By: StuAllenPhotos - But he keeps in touch with his stage roots. Here he develops his Shakespeare s..... or Change Player Size Watch this video in a new window or...

  • Brian Cox Teaches A Toddler To Recite Shakespeare (VIDEO) Shared By: mdreece - Never have we heard Hamlet's classic lines delivered with such gust, such fervor, such adorableness. Even his teacher, who just happens to be Brian...

  • Archaeologists to dig up Shakespeare’s rubbish Shared By: Maryannaville - A team of archaeologists began digging on the site of Shakespeare’s last home yesterday in a search for clues that might reveal more about his life.

  • Characters of Shakespeare's Plays/Doubtful Plays Of Shakespeare - Wikisource Shared By: WikiSourceBot - 'All the editors, with the exception of Capell, are unanimous in rejecting TITUS ANDRONICUS as unworthy of Shakespeare, though they always allow it to...

  • Royal Shakespeare Company : Telford teenagers Step up to Shakespeare Shared By: edmoore - Royal Shakespeare Company - The RSC is probably the most famous classical theatre company in the world. This site has all the latest information on...


  • Tattoos Music Notes And Their Spell
    By: Azeem Ashraf | - If music be the food of love, play on. William Shakespeare managed to say it in fewer words. The very sight of musical symbols is enough to put a person in that pleasurable mood, which perhaps explains why people incorporate musical motifs in tattoo designs. These tattoos music notes also add to the sophistication of your personality and soothe your inner love for music. The most recognizable signs in the musical realm are the treble clef, the staff, and the notes.

    The popul ...

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  • Choosing A Bible Translation
    By: Dr. Bell | - Anyone wishing to study the Bible is immediately faced with a key question what is the best version to use? The available options range from the King James Version, which can be as intimidating as reading Shakespeare to The Message paraphrase published in 2002 which is earthly and very informal. This spectrum of choices can be confusing to those who have studied or brought Bibles to church on a regular basis, much more so for those who havent read a Bible in years or ever.
    Here ...

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  • Groups Lend Capability To Make Money On The Web
    By: kramesh | - William Shakespeare once wrote; "The world is a stage on which everyone is a player" ... and in Network Marketing, each player must play his/her part.

    To make money on the internet, working from home, you need to find the players that play their parts.


    Making money online is much easier when everyone is part of the performance...

    Groups play a large part in forming such an association. A Yahoo group is easy to form and allows communication to flow ...

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  • Lies, Innuendo And Oneupmanship In Shakespeare's Poetry: Sonnet 130 And The Fair Youth Series
    By: Paul Thomson | - Shakespeares Sonnet 130 is unique in its unglamorous portrayal of the so-called Dark Lady to whom it is addressed. In it, the narrator offers us a startlingly generous list of differences between the Dark Lady and your stereotypical beauty: she has ugly lips, a bad complexion, frizzy hair, colorless cheeks, smelly breath, an unmelodic voice, and a funky gait.

    Giggles aside, what makes this description more compelling than Shakespeares other sonnets particula ...

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  • For The Girls: Performing Gender In To Kill A Mockingbird And Twelfth Night
    By: Paul Thomson | - For most of us, the long, lazy days of summer conjure up memories of fortbuilding, skinned knees, sleepovers, and an influx of summer bugs befitting a biblical plague. For girls in particular, though, the summers of childhood were a time of liberation from the dresses and demureness that were unduly expected of them in the classroom. Sugar and spice my ass; childhood is about ROMPING.

    Our collective memories of summertime adventure are undoubtedly the reason why Harper Lee"s To Kill a Moc ...

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  • Madness, Futility, And Death: A Shakespearean Take On Poe's The Raven"'
    By: Paul Thomson | - Edgar Allan Poes The Raven is one of the most easily recognizable poems in the world, ranking it right up there with Beans, Beans, the Musical Fruit. Written from a first-person perspective, the poem chronicles its narrators rapid descent into madness, paranoia, and the macabre after a strange encounter with a ghoulish raven. His brooding melancholy at the beginning of the narrative has been set off by the loss of a beloved Lenore, whom we are left to presume ...
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  • Why Shakespeare Breaks Basic Writing Rules In Sonnet 18,"' Hamlet,"' And Romeo And Juliet
    By: Paul Thomson | - Shakespeare famously opens his Sonnet 18 with the question, Shall I compare thee to a summers day? and then proceeds to do exactly that. Aside from establishing rhythmic continuity and rhyme scheme, this may not seem like the best use of the readers time especially considering that sonnets have such limited real estate to begin with. As we read on, however, we discover that the poem, which pretends to be dedicated to a mysterious thee, actually ends up being ...
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  • Verona And Shakespeare: A Long-distance Love
    By: Martina Meneghetti | - Verona was and still is a very important politic and economic center. But it is also a city rich in history and in magical and fascinating atmospheres.

    Verona has become famous in Italy but also in the world, especially thanks to the Shakespeares works here located. The Bard never had the chance to visit Verona, but he got an idea about it by reading works of Luigi Da Porto, Masuccio Salernitano and Matteo Bandello. These writers inspired him especially for his most famou ...

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  • Shakespeare, Poetry, And The Power Of Art
    By: Paul Thomson | - Poetry can have an incredibly polarizing effect: people tend to either swear by at or swear at it. What gives? Well, aside from the fact that good poetry can be dauntingly elitist while bad poetry is, as a rule, truly god-awful, art in general is a very powerful medium and poetry is one particularly artsy and inaccessible form of art. In fact, poetry is so powerful that it can be wielded against other people. Not just in the sense of intimidating your classmates with a spiffy beret, or holding ...
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  • Corruption And Power According To Shakespeare, Ibsen, And Metallica
    By: Paul Thomson | - As Metallica awesomely misquoted from Shakespeare, heavy is the head that wears the crown. Probably because most heads actually willing to wear a crown are a wee bit on the swollen side. And since big head + big crown + huge responsibility almost never = rainbows and cupcakes, its easy to see why the phrase power corrupts is so universally held as truth.

    For a great pick-me-up in the morning, check out the days world news. Or local news. Or high school news, ...

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  • Blasts From The Past
    By: Nate Gillespie | - Sometimes it seems that all is new in the world. New developments in science and technology roll out at a staggering pace, revolutionizing our day-to-day lives and enticing us with the promise of allowing us to boldly go where no man has gone before. (Or, at the very least, enticing us with ridiculously cool CGI effects in the new Star Trek movie.) Sometimes it seems like we'll soon all be communicating with each other only via Twitter.

    But then sometimes it seems like the world isn't ...

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  • William Shakespeare History, William Shakespeare Festival, Shakespeare Festival Celebrations
    By: Govind Ram | - William Shakespeare was baptized in Stratford-Upon-Avon, Warwickshire, on April 26, 1564 and shakespeare was born on April 23, 1564 it is believe that this day was his birthday because there are no records about his birth from state government on which day he was born. William Shakespeare father John Shakespeare, was a whittawer he have approach to live in the city as a glove maker. Shakespeare mother Mary Arden, was from a quite rich family and john shakespeares had eight children and W ...
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  • We Are What We Read?
    By: Nate Gillespie | - Sometimes it's tempting to think that a person's favorite book is the secret to unlocking his character. That's what makes Who Reads What a directory of celebrities' favorite books assembled over a twenty-year period by Glenna Nowell of the tiny Gardiner (Maine) Public Library so immensely fascinating. Sometimes the books seem to confirm exactly what we think we already know about their readers. We see that John McCain's favorite book is Hemingway's For Whom The Bell Tolls, ...
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  • I Literally Cannot Imagine How Random That Is
    By: Maxine Clarke | - The English language is one of the most expressive and evocative in the world, yet is also the most bastardised and abused by its native speakers. How often do you find yourself being subjected to throwaway, non-sensical terms which add nothing to the substance of a conversation? The sad thing is, more than you probably realise.

    Some of history's greatest writers were of English descent and composed magnificent prose whose excellence is surpassed only by its legacy. William Shake ...

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  • The Winter's Tale Tickets - Shakespeare For The Winter
    By: Brent Warnken | - Shakespeare's Winter's Tale is tragic and uplifting tale of friendship, jealousy and redemption. It tells the story of two childhood friends, Leontes and Polixenes, who grow up to become the King of Sicilia and the King of Bohemia. The story is one that seems to be half-rooted in Greco-Roman mythology, with the core of ecstatic, and somewhat unearthly, romance that characterizes much of Shakespeare's work. This winter the BAM Harvey Theater in Brooklyn, New York, is presenting The Winter's Tale ...
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  • Character Review: Othello
    By: Jeff Stats | - Tragedy is a unique and very powerful tool in classic literature. As a common standard in tragedy, the protagonist, or "tragic hero" is of high standing who is faced with some opposing force whether internal or external. This writing style is of great popularity mostly for the reason of having common ground with the real life, lives of most people who can associate with the characters of the piece of literature work. The definition of "tragic" could be explained as something very unfortunate, ev ...
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  • Hamlet: Play Review
    By: Jeff Stats | - Any play or literary work by Shakespeare is a masterpiece of a kind. Regardless of the genre, tragedy or comedy he is able to unmistakably affect the reader to the depth of the soul and reveal the biggest fears and secret desires of human as he is a renowned expert of a human soul. "Hamlet" and "A Midsummer Night's Dream" are his plays that were probably meant to disclose different meanings however there are numerous similarities found in both works.

    "Hamlet" is a tragedy t ...

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  • William Shakespeare
    By: Peter Hutch | - Shakespeare produced most of his known work between 1590 and 1613. His early plays were mainly comedies and histories, genres he raised to the peak of sophistication and artistry by the end of the sixteenth century. Next he wrote mainly tragedies until about 1608, including Hamlet, King Lear, and Macbeth, considered some of the finest examples in the English language. In his last phase, he wrote tragicomedies, also known as romances, and collaborated with other playwrights. Many of his plays wer ...
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  • A Discussion On Progressive Taxation
    By: Christian Boticcelli | - The United States government taxation system is based off the fundamental progressive taxation theory. Most people don t fully understand the taxation system and question the validity of the system the United States currently has. However, I believe that progressive taxation is the best system for the majority of society.

    The progressive taxation system is most evident in the income taxes; the tax is levied at a rate that increases as the quantity of income increases. This system was ...

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  • The Underrated James Boswell
    By: Michael Turner | - It would be generally agreed that the greatest literary figure of the 18th Century was Dr Samuel Johnson.
    In terms of enduring influence, this assessment is probably correct. He set the foundations of the modern English that we speak today, with his Dictionary of 1755; and had the wisdom and humility to recognise that he was performing an act of description, rather than prescription, thus leaving the language free to develop in harmony with changing times, deriving its force and vigour fr ...

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  • An Inspiration To Underdogs
    By: Ernest Berstein | - Let us begin with a small incident. The film is nearing the interval. The hero and the heroine are locked in an emotionally charged conversation atop a high rise building. Suddenly the hero pushes the heroine down the building and seconds later her body lies in a pool of blood sending shivers down the audiences spines. Then, from the well of the silent crowd, a shocked voice of a six year old boy shoots up, Oh! She is dead. What a film it is, the heroine dies so soon?. The innocent rem ...
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  • A Short History Of The Life Of Dr. Samuel Johnson
    By: Michael Turner | - Samuel Johnson was born at Lichfield, in Staffordshire on th 18th September, 1709. His father, Michael Johnson, was a not very successful bookseller, (although his shop (nowadays the birthplace museum, was, and is, a very substantial building). His father also carried on his trade at local markets, and was a publisher also in a small way. He suffered from the condition known at the time as 'melancholy', nowadays, depression. His mother was a woman
    of sound sense, and well aware of her son ...

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  • Shakespeare By Bill Bryson
    By: Philip Spires | - At the start of Shakespeare Bill Bryson apologises for the fact that there is not much to tell. Every aspect of the bard's physical presence on the planet seems to be shrouded in doubt and mystery. We don't even know what he looked like. We don't know much about where he lived, or what he did with his time, apart from write and act. And, though we think we know a reasonable amount about what Will wrote, we know next to nothing about how his works were performed, alongside zero abo ...
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  • The Real Secret To Enjoy Your Free Time Audio Books
    By: Ranju Kumar | - Instead of listening to a radio or sitting in an absolute hush on the way to work, most people prefer listening to an Audio Book. With a wide range of titles available, you're certain to discover something that appeals to your interests.

    One of the common ways to acquire titles is to search online. With thousands of titles available, it is almost impossible not to find what you are looking for. A lot of these can be immediately downloaded onto your computer or portable media play ...

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  • Something Every Book Reader Needs To Know
    By: Ranju Kumar | - I am a great Fan of Audio Books. I have been listening to this for years. I listen to audio books while driving to and from work. It is a great way to avoid the stress of heavy traffic and the repetitive task of driving the same route to work every day.

    Listening to this is enjoyable since it is easier and more entertaining to do so. Furthermore, it does not consume a lot of time to listen to a book as it would take to read it. One of the best means to enjoy a book virtually anywh ...

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  • Stratford-on-avon: Shakespeare Country
    By: Hannah Lodge | - Stratford-upon-Avon, as the name suggests, is a town on the River Avon in south Warwickshire. Stratford is used in reference to the local town, whilst upon-Avon is added to include the whole district. Having Anglo-Saxon origins, and growing up as a market town in medieval times, the town now has a population of more than 23,676. Stratford-upon-Avon, lined with Elizabethan streets, hidden alleyways and dotted with places of interest, is most famous for being the birthplace of William Shakespe ...
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  • Movies That Change Lives - 25 Quotes From Hobart Shakespeareans
    By: Priscilla Parham | - What is it like in a day in the life of a child? How about a 5th grade inner-city school student? I just found this 52-minute documentary gem. No this is not some sad sob story but an awe-inspiring look at a year in the goings on of a Los Angeles, public school, 5th grade class and their extraordinary teacher Rafe Esquith.

    Can one person make a difference? You bet they can. This class even gets visits from such notable greats as Sir Ian McKellen and Michael York. Here are 25 memor ...

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  • Shakespeare Cipher Stories, Part 1
    By: Carla Groenewegen, MA | - Did Shakespeare write Shakespeare? Many people doubt that, for various reasonsthe most obvious one being that a barely literate actor from the sleepy village of Stratford-on-Avon could not possibly have written with such accuracy and familiarity the many scenes in the plays that invoke the classics or the pomp of nobility and royal courts. Furthermore, no manuscripts by Shakespeare were ever found, and only six Shakespeare signatures are known to exist. The signatures all look different and g ...
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  • Plays, Plays And More Plays
    By: Carla Groenewegen, MA | - Few people know that many of William Shakespeare's plays were published posthumously. Virginia Fellows' Shakespeare Code includes an intriguing discussion of works attributed to Shakespeare that appeared after his passing in 1616. Shakespeare had been dead for seven years when the First Folio of his collected works was published. This celebrated Folio edition contained 36 plays, half of which had never been seen before. According to Fellows, many of the previously unpublished plays were entered ...
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  • The True Value Of The Ipod
    By: Mauro | - If music be the food of love, play on. Ah, that William Shakespeare he really nailed it with that line when it comes to the world's love affair with music. We need it, as it is the essence of our very survival, and we, as humans, can never get enough of it. Our appetite and desire for music will never be satisfied, so why bother fighting the urge? Give us more, and we will ingest and enjoy it gleefully.

    Now, when Shakespeare coined that phrase, he was probably referring to some ...

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  • Francis Bacon Too Dull For Shakespeare?
    By: Carla Groenewegen, MA | - Whoever wrote Shakespeare, he must have been a lively fellow. Virginia M. Fellow's book, The Shakespeare Code, makes a very strong case for Francis Bacon's authorship of the oeuvre of William Shakespeare, based on historical evidence as well as on statements found in cipher in Shakespeare's works. She's not alone in this; many have come to the conclusion that Shakespeare's works were not written by the actor William Shakespeare. Quite a few people support the claim that Bacon is the true author ...
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  • Download Audio Book Titles To Keep You Company
    By: james lowe | - As an individual who does not care to read you can now listen, that is correct! You can listen to books that you would not care to spend the time reading but are interested in hearing. You can download audio book titles to keep you company while you are doing many different tasks. Some that are easy, some that are boring and even some that are difficult.

    You can listen to them while you are on the road to college or work. There are so many audio titles now available from good audi ...

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  • The Antahkarana, Bridge, Tower Of Babel Or Babble, Chakras, Meditation, Gurdjieff, Shakespeare, Guru
    By: Swami Satchidanand | - The tower of Babel is the synonym in the Bible for a human being. In a "normal" human being every part works and communicates together.

    The brain, spine and connection with the Soul, the Antahkarana, comprise the tower.

    Along the spine are the Seven Major Chakras or parallel processors. As I said, these chakras rarely communicate. They rarely work together. The parable goes that because God was afraid that the Tower of Babel would be built so high as to reach heav ...

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