Shakespeare's Common Prayers
The Book of Common Prayer and the Elizabethan Age
Daniel Swift
From Our Blog
By Daniel Swift Susan Sontag wrote that having a photograph of Shakespeare would be like having a piece of the True Cross. We don't have a photograph, of course, and even the portraits that we do have are unreliable, but in his plays he left snapshots of a different kind.
Posted on August 15, 2012
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By Daniel Swift 'Remember, remember the fifth of November,' instructs the old nursery rhyme, and offers a useful summary: 'Gunpowder, treason and plot.' But we have never been sure quite what, or how, we should be remembering. On 5 November 1605 a small gang of Catholics and minor noblemen plotted to blow up the Houses of Parliament, during the State Opening at which King James I would be present. One of the conspirators, Guy Fawkes, was caught with the gunpowder before he set it off. The other plotters were soon caught, and all were executed.
Posted on November 5, 2012
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