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ADVERTISEMENT Regardless of your opinion of the Bard, the man (or men) had the uncanny ability to take a phrase that was so perfect it couldn’t help but to catch on. Many phrases that we take for granted are an unintentional homage to Shakespeare every time we use them. Also, given the suspected authorship of [...]
Posted by Shannon Harris on Friday, April 26, 2013 at 12:01 am
Filed under Literature · Tagged all of a sudden, as you like it, bard, Hamlet, hot blooded, knock knock jokes, knock know who's there, like the dickens, love is blind, Macbeth, merchant of venice, merry wives of windsor, night owl, nightowl, off with his head, phrase meanings, Phrases, romeo and juliet, Shakespeare, shakespeare quote, shakespeare quotes, taming of the shrew, there's a method to my madness, too much of a good thing, two gentlemen of verona, wild goose chase, william shakespeare
There’s no better way to sound smart than by dropping a perfectly timed quote from some well-respected literature. It shows that you’re both well-read and possess the stunning intellect to memorize whole chunks of books in the off chance that you might need it at some point (and barely anyone ever considers the implication that [...]
Posted by JF Sargent on Tuesday, March 27, 2012 at 12:01 am
Filed under Humor, Literature · Tagged Academy of American Poets, Alice in Wonderland, Antonin Scalia, Friedrich Nietzsche, Hamlet, JF Sargent, john keats, Lewis Carrol, Lewis Carroll, Mending Wall, misunderstood literature, misunderstood poetry, Ode on a Grecian Urn, Poetry, Robert Frost, Romeo & Juliet, West is West, william shakespeare
Despite William Shakespeare’s status as a literary giant, a small but vocal group of scholars, playwrights, actors, and conspiracy theorists have long argued that he is not the true author of his plays. Even though the vast majority of Shakespeare scholars have rejected it, this theory has become increasingly prominent since the 1980s, and has [...]
Posted by Evan Andrews on Friday, September 2, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under History, Literature, People · Tagged 17th Earl of Oxford, Anonymous, anonymous movie, biographer of Sir Philip Sidney, Christopher Marlowe, court musician, Edward de Vere, Elizabeth Sidney, Elizabethan era, Emelia Bassano, Emilia Lanier, Entertainment_Culture, Francis Bacon, Fulke Greville, Greater London, Henry Neville, Jesuit spy, John Dee, Literature, London, Marlovian theory, Marlovians, Mary Sidney, Mary Sidney Herbert, Movies, Oxfordian theory, Philip Sidney, plays, Roger Manners, Shakespeare, Shakespeare authorship question, Shakespeare's plays, Shakespeare's sonnets, Shakespearean authorship, theatre, United Kingdom, Walter Raleigh, william shakespeare, William Stanley, Wilton Circle, writer
Ireland’s long history is riddled with ancient mythology and folklore. Ireland’s ancient societies, the Druids and the Celtics, believed in the power of magic and many of these beliefs spread to modern day legends told again and again across the country. Stories of warriors with all the knowledge of the world, fairies playing pranks on [...]
Posted by Shell Harris on Thursday, March 17, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under History, Religion · Tagged Angela Colley, Aoife, Banshee, Britain, Changeling, dagdas harp, Europe, European folklore, fae, faeries, Fairies, faries, finn maccool, Fionn mac Cumhaill, gone with the wind, high priest, Ireland, irish culture, irish folklore, Irish Legends, Irish mythology, King, Leprechaun, leprechuans, liar, liir, Lir, Mythological Cycle, pookas, REpublic of Ireland, Rhett Butler, Scotland, shamrock, st patrick, Tears, the children of lir, The Dagda, Tuatha Dé Danann, United Kingdom, william shakespeare
As long as there have been poets, there have been love poems. After all, if love cannot inspire, what can? Our minds turn to love on special anniversaries, Valentine’s Day and weddings, but how to express it? We are not all blessed with the gift of poetic words. The list below may include a romantic [...]
Posted by Anne Iredale on Friday, May 8, 2009 at 2:07 am
Filed under Literature · Tagged a drinking song, a red, adrian henri, another valentine, Be My Valentine, Brian Patten, bright star, elizabeth barrett browning, emily dickinson, how do i love thee, john fuller, John Keat, john keats, Literature, love, love is, love poems, love poems for her, love poems for him, love sonnet 130, oscar wilde, passion, poem, poet, Poetry, quotes, red rose, relationships, rober burns, Robert Browning, Robert Burns, Roger McGough, romantic love poems, romantic poems, Romantic poetry, Roy Fuller, Sex, Shakespeare, top 10 lists, valentine, valentine's day, w.b. yeats, we are made one with what we touch and see, wendy cope, wild nights, Wilde, william shakespeare, yeats
The Bard, William Shakespeare, created a lot of fascinating characters, and some of the most fascinating are the villains. They encompass the worst of human characteristics, but their motives are often very real and surprisingly easy to relate to: jealousy, heartbreak, bitterness…all of the ugly things that bring out the worst in all of us. [...]
Posted by Elizabeth Downing on Sunday, September 7, 2008 at 8:56 pm
Filed under Literature · Tagged Anne Neville, Claudio, Don John, Don Pedro, Hamlet, Iago, Laertes, Lavinia, Macduff’s castle, merchant of venice, Othello, pound of flesh, Prince Hamlet, Richard II, Richard III, Shakespeare, Shakespearean tragedies, Tamora, Titus, Titus Andronicus, Venice, villain, villains, william shakespeare