Bard Words (33)

“Thus far, with rough and all-unable pen” (Henry V). The Chorus enters and ends the play, explaining that the events on the stage were mightier than could be actually portrayed. Henry and Katharine did produce a son, Henry the Sixth, whose story is told in other plays. The epilogue is written in the form of […]

Bard Words (32)

“A glooming peace this morning with it brings.” (Romeo and Juliet) The epilogue to Romeo and Juliet is spoken by Prince Escalus at the very end of the play. After the bodies of Romeo and Juliet have been discovered, Friar Laurence makes a full confession explaining the series of events. Lord Montague and Lord Capulet […]

Bard Words (31)

“It is not the fashion to see the lady the Epilogue” (As You Like It) Another example of Shakespeare writing for women and indeed allowing them to take the place usually reserved for men. This being said, of course the women characters were in Shakespeare’s day played by men, because it was illegal for women […]

Bard Words (30)

“Could great men thunder…” (Measure for Measure). I was reminded of this monologue by Isabella a few days ago when the prospect of Boris Johnson returning top No.10 loomed large. Having now seen the cabinet that Rishi Sunak has assembled around him, these words came back to me just as strongly. Isabella believes that men […]

Bard Words (29)

“What’s he that wishes so” (Henry V) This is better known as the ‘St Crispin’s Day’ speech and is one of the most famous speeches in all of Shakespeare. Henry V is a history play written in around 1599 and detailing the English king’s wars with France during the Hundred Years War (1337-1453). Henry V […]

Bard Words (28)

‘Two households, both alike in dignity’ (Romeo and Juliet) So begins the Prologue to Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet. The Prologue tells us the setting of the play: we are to be transported to the beautiful (‘fair’) Italian city of Verona, where the ensuing action takes place. There, a long-standing feud between two well-respected households or […]

Bard Words (27)

‘Is this a dagger which I see before me, / The handle toward my hand?’ (Macbeth) This scene is often staged, and filmed, with the dagger suspended in mid-air. But this makes the implied boundary between the real and the hallucinatory too clear-cut: as numerous critics have pointed out, the point is that Macbeth believes […]

Bard Words (26)

‘Once more unto the breach, dear friends, once more’ (Henry V) This is the second most famous speech from Henry V, and comes in Act 3 Scene 1 of the play, during the siege of Harfleur in Normandy, carried out by the real historical King Henry V in 1415 as part of the Hundred Years […]

Bard Words (25)

‘O for a Muse of fire’ (Henry V) so begins the Prologue to Henry V. The Prologue is spoken by the Chorus, and the speech sets the scene for the historical drama that will follow; it also makes reference to the very theatre in which Henry V was first performed, which makes it doubly notable […]

Bard Words (24)

‘If music be the food of love, play on’: (Twelfth Night) These nine words, spoken by the Count Orsino, are among the most famous opening lines in all of Shakespeare. To set the scene: Twelfth Night opens with the Duke of Illyria, Orsino, pining away with love for Olivia, a countess whose father died a […]

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