Month: December 2014

Class work 17/12/14

Language
He that much steerage…..

Fate

Prologue
Pre-determines
Romeo and Juliet fate
Events

Friar tripping after grave stone

Chance meeting of servant and Romeo

Friar john quarantine

The path

1 scour thought your own notes for other references to fate

2 for every point you’re going to make find a full accurate quotation

3 develop an outline of your essay-paragraph by paragraph

Sample plan
Point

1 the whole play is strutted around the idea of fate, through

2 foreshadowing Prologue

3 co-incidence Meeting servant friar John-quarantine

4 language Metaphor : stars
Metaphor : ship/bark

5 characters’ reference :direct quotes about fate: “I am fortune fool

6

Elizabethan Theatre and William Shakespeare

Elizabethan theatre and the name of William Shakespeare are inextricably bound together, yet there were others writing plays at the same time as the bard of Avon. One of the most successful was Christopher Marlowe, who many contemporaries considered Shakespeare’s superior. Marlowe’s career, however, was cut short at a comparatively young age when he died in a tavern fight in Deptford, the victim of a knife in the eye.

Theatre had an unsavoury reputation. London authorities refused to allow plays within the city, so theatres opened across the Thames in Southwark, outside the authority of the city administration.

The first proper theatre as we know it was the Theatre, built at Shoreditch in 1576. Before this time plays were performed in the courtyard of inns, or sometimes, in the houses of noblemen. A noble had to be careful about which play he allowed to be performed within his home, however. Anything that was controversial or political was likely to get him in trouble with the crown!

After the Theatre, further open air playhouses opened in the London area, including the Rose (1587), and the Hope (1613). The most famous playhouse was the Globe (1599) built by the company in which Shakespeare had a stake.

The Globe was only in use until 1613, when a canon fired during a performance of Henry VIII caught the roof on fire and the building burned to the ground. The site of the theatre was rediscovered in the 20th century and a reconstruction built near the spot.

These theatres could hold several thousand people, most standing in the open pit before the stage, though rich nobles could watch the play from a chair set on the side of the stage itself.

Theatre performances were held in the afternoon, because, of course, there was no artificial lighting. Women attended plays, though often the prosperous woman would wear a mask to disguise her identity. Further, no women performed in the plays. Female roles were generally performed by young boys.

English homework new context

Jonjo: who’s this

Ed: I don’t no I’ve never seen him around here before

David: have you got a problem me coming down these ends

Jonjo to David: pull out the strap

Henry enters

Henry: you getting rod to my cousin

Jonjo and David: yeah and what

Henry: lets fight here right now

Ed: no leave it there just a wast of are time

Jonjo: I’ll just start on you then

Henry and ed: come one

Police enter

Ed, Henry, Jonjo and David: run now

4/12/14

Fate is where pre-determined events lead to final destination. Shakespeare creates tension through constant references to fate in Romeo and Juliet. An example of this is Shakespeare’s use of language in a metaphor ” let he that hath steerage of my course, direct my sail ” which Romeo says before the capulet party in act 1, scene 4.

Shakespeare describes that Romeo is the sail of a ship and then god will be directing his because he is the captain of the ship telling the ship were to go north, south, East or west.