Drawing on an exceptional combination of skills as literary biographer, novelist, and chronicler of London history, Peter Ackroyd surely re-creates the world that shaped Shakespeare--and brings the playwright himself into unusually vivid focus. With characteristic narrative panache, Ackroyd immerses us in sixteenth-century Stratford and the rural landscape–the industry, the animals, even the flowers–that would appear in Shakespeare’s plays. He takes us through Shakespeare’s London neighborhood and the fertile, competitive theater world where he worked as actor and writer. He shows us Shakespeare as a businessman, and as a constant reviser of his writing. In joining these intimate details with profound intuitions about the playwright and his work, Ackroyd has produced an altogether engaging masterpiece.
Chapter 1: There Was a Starre Daunst, and Vnder That Was I Borne
Chapter 3: Dost Thou Loue Pictures?
Chapter 4: For Where Thou Art, There Is the World It Selfe
Chapter 5: Tell Me This: Who Begot Thee?
Chapter 6: A Witty Mother, Witlesse Else Her Sonne
Chapter 7: But This Is Worshipfull Society
Chapter 8: I Am a Kind of Burre, I Shal Sticke
Chapter 9: This Prettie Lad Will Proue Our Countries Blisse
Chapter 10: What Sees Thou There?
Chapter 11: I Sommon Up Remembrance of Things Past
Chapter 12: A Nowne and a Verbe and Such Abhominable Wordes
Chapter 13: That’s Not So Good Now
Chapter 14: Of Such a Mery Nimble Stiring Spirit
Chapter 15: At Your Employment, at Your Seruice Sir
Chapter 16: Before I Know My Selfe, Seeke Not to Know Me
Chapter 17: I Can See a Church by Day-Light
Chapter 18: To Tell Thee Plaine, I Ayme to Lye with Thee
Chapter 20: To Morrow, Toward London
Chapter 21: The Spirit of the Time Shall Teach Me Speed
Chapter 22: There’s Many a Beast Then in a Populous City
Chapter 23: Sir I Shall Study Deserving
Chapter 24: I Will Not Be Slack to Play My Part in Fortunes Pageant
Chapter 25: As in a Theatre, Whence They Gape and Point
Chapter 26: This Keene Incounter of Our Wits
Chapter 28: I See Sir, You Are Eaten Vp with Passion
Chapter 29: Why Should I Not Now Have the Like Successes?
Chapter 30: O Barbarous and Bloody Spectacle
Chapter 31: Ile Neuer Pawse Againe, Neuer Stand Still
Chapter 32: Among the Buzzing pleased Multitude
Chapter 33: An’t Please Your Honor Players
Chapter 34: They Thought It Good You Heare a Play
Chapter 35: There’s a Great Spirit Gone Thus Did I Desire It
Chapter 36: The Hath a Mint of Phrases in His Braine
Chapter 37: Stay Goe, Doe What You Will
Chapter 38: We few, We Happy few, We Band of Brothers
Chapter 39: Lord How Art Thou Changed
Chapter 40: Bid Me Discourse, I Will Inchaunt Thine Eare
Chapter 41: Doth Rauish Like Inchaunting Harmonie
Chapter 42: To Fill the World with Words
Chapter 43: See, See, They Ioyne, Embrace, and Seeme to Kisse
Chapter 44: What Zale, What furie, Hath Inspirde Thee Now?
Chapter 45: Thus Leaning on Mine Elbow I Begin
Chapter 46: So Musicall a Discord, Such Sweete Thunder
Chapter 47: I Vnderstand a Fury in Your words
Chapter 48: So shaken as We Are, So Wan with Care
Chapter 49: Ah, No, No, No, It Is Mine Onely sonne
Chapter 50: What Are You? A Gentleman
Chapter 51: His Companies Vnletter’d Rude, and Shallow
Chapter 52: You Haue Not the Booke of Riddles About You. Haue You?
Chapter 53: You Would Plucke Out the Hart of My Mistery
Chapter 54: And to Be Short, What Not, That’s Sweete and Happie
Chapter 55: Therefore Am I of an Honourable House
Chapter 56: Pirates May Make Cheape Penyworths of Their Pillage
Chapter 57: No More Words, We Beseech You
Chapter 58: A Loyall Just and Vpright Gentleman
Chapter 59: A Pretty Plot. Well Chosen to Build Vpon
Chapter 60: Thou Knowest My Lodging, Get Me Inke and Paper
Chapter 61: This Wide and Vniuersall Theatre
Chapter 62: Then Let the Trumpets Sound
Chapter 63: Why There You Toucht the Life of Our Designe
Chapter 64: See How the Giddy Multitude Doe Point
Chapter 65: And Here We Wander in Illusions
Chapter 66: Sweete Smoke of Rhetorike
Chapter 67: Well Bandied Both, a Set of Wit Well Played
Chapter 68: Now, One the Better; Then, Another Best
Chapter 69: I Must Become a Borrower of the Night
Chapter 70: Cut I Am in Their Bosomes
Chapter 71: And So in Spite of Death Thou Doest Suruiue
Chapter 72: I Am (Quoth He) Expected of My friends
Chapter 73: My Lord This Is But the Play, Theyre But in Jest
Chapter 74: Hee Is Something Peeuish That Way
Chapter 75: I, But the Case Is Alter’d
Chapter 76: I Will a Round Unvarnish’d Tale Deliuer
Chapter 77: Why, Sir, What’s Your Conceit in That?
Chapter 78: The Bitter Disposition of the Time
Chapter 80: My Life Hath in This Line Some Interest
Chapter 81: That Strain Agen, It Had a Dying fall
Chapter 82: As in a Theatre the Eies of Men
Chapter 83: And Sorrow Ebs, Being Blown with Wind of Words
Chapter 84: And Beautie Making Beautifull Old Rime
Chapter 85: So There’s My Riddle, One that’s Dead Is Quicke
Chapter 86: When Men Were fond, I Smild, and Wondred How
Chapter 87: Let Time Shape, and There an End
Chapter 88: I Haue Not Deseru’d This
Chapter 89: My Selfe Am Strook in Yeares I Must Confesse
Chapter 90: The Wheele Is Come full Circle I Am Heere
Chapter 91: To Heare the Story of Your Life