The Sonnets. Уильям Шекспир

The Sonnets - Уильям Шекспир


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Sonnet 105

       Sonnet 106

       Sonnet 107

       Sonnet 108

       Sonnet 109

       Sonnet 110

       Sonnet 111

       Sonnet 112

       Sonnet 113

       Sonnet 114

       Sonnet 115

       Sonnet 116

       Sonnet 117

       Sonnet 118

       Sonnet 119

       Sonnet 120

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       Sonnet 123

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       Sonnet 125

       Sonnet 126

       Sonnet 127

       Sonnet 128

       Sonnet 129

       Sonnet 130

       Sonnet 131

       Sonnet 132

       Sonnet 133

       Sonnet 134

       Sonnet 135

       Sonnet 136

       Sonnet 137

       Sonnet 138

       Sonnet 139

       Sonnet 140

       Sonnet 141

       Sonnet 142

       Sonnet 143

       Sonnet 144

       Sonnet 145

       Sonnet 146

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       Sonnet 149

       Sonnet 150

       Sonnet 151

       Sonnet 152

       Sonnet 153

       Sonnet 154

       Shakespeare: Words and Phrases

       About the Publisher

      An Elizabethan playhouse. Note the apron stage protruding into the auditorium, the space below it, the inner room at the rear of the stage, the gallery above the inner stage, the canopy over the main stage, and the absence of a roof over the audience.

       The Theatre in Shakespeare’s Day

      On the face of it, the conditions in the Elizabethan theatre were not such as to encourage great writers. The public playhouse itself was not very different from an ordinary inn-yard; it was open to the weather; among the spectators were often louts, pickpockets and prostitutes; some of the actors played up to the rowdy elements in the audience by inserting their own jokes into the authors’ lines, while others spoke their words loudly but unfeelingly; the presentation was often rough and noisy, with fireworks to represent storms and battles, and a table and a few chairs to represent a tavern; there were no actresses, so boys took the parts of women, even such subtle and mature ones as Cleopatra and Lady Macbeth; there was rarely any scenery at all in the modern sense. In fact, a quick inspection of the English theatre in the reign of Elizabeth I by a time-traveller from the twentieth century might well produce only one positive reaction: the costumes were often elaborate and beautiful.

      Shakespeare himself makes frequent comments in his plays about the limitations of the playhouse and the actors of his time, often apologizing for them. At the beginning of Henry V the Prologue refers to the stage as ‘this unworthy scaffold’ and to the theatre building (the Globe, probably) as ‘this wooden O’, and emphasizes the urgent need for imagination in making up for all the deficiencies of presentation. In introducing Act IV the Chorus goes so far as to say:

      … we shall much disgrace

      With four or five most vile and ragged foils,

      Right ill-dispos’d in brawl ridiculous,

      The name of Agincourt, (lines 49–52)

      In A Midsummer Night’s Dream (Act V, Scene i) he seems to dismiss actors with the words:

      The best in this kind are but shadows.

      Yet


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