WilliamShakespeare

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Latest blogosphere posts tagged “WilliamShakespeare”

  • She will, veiled, walk


    Stupid and ContagiousAuthority Authority: 453
    "... like a cloistress, she will, veiled, walk and water once a day her chamber round with eye-offending brine ..." -William Shakespeare Twelfth Night, Act I, Scene I Mail us: stupidand@gmail.com Home Art Babes Cartoons Dylan Music Videos Other
    1 day ago
  • Gordon Brown has destroyed our finances, his own reputation and much else


    News PoliticsAuthority Authority: 142
    To see how unspeakably awful our fiscal position is – relative both to other countries and to where we were before Gordon Brown took over – have a look at the brilliant Burning Our Money blog. The PM is on course to double our national debt: from 47 per cent of GDP when he took [...]
    2 days ago
  • Macbrown – a Synopsis


    Liberal Democrat VoiceAuthority Authority: 506
    Hat-tip and sincere apologies to Master Shakespeare. In a thunderstorm, three witches [Hazel Blears MP, Jacqui Smith MP & Caroline Flint MP] decide to meet again on the heath “after the deed is done.” Next, a captain reports to King Dunblair that Macbrown beat MacMajorwald in battle. Darling adds that the ...
    3 days ago
  • "Stars, hide your fires, / Let not light see my black and deep desires."


    Considering LilyAuthority Authority: 145
    “Stars, hide your fires, / Let not light see my black and deep desires.” - William...
    6 days ago
  • Scotland’s oldest book goes on display


    Deadline Press & Picture AgencyAuthority Authority: 532
    An extract from the book By Cara Sulieman SCOTLAND’S oldest surviving book is set to go on display tomorrow (Friday) for the first time in a generation. The pocket-sized medieval book of Psalms is often described as Scotland’s Book of Kells due to the vivid and detailed coloured illuminations that cover the ...
    6 days ago
  • 6 questions we always ask — LeAnn Suchy, MN Reads’ new reviewer


    Minnesota ReadsAuthority Authority: 465
    Hello, allow me to introduce our newest MN Reads’ reviewer, LeAnn Suchy. She found MN Reads on twitter ( @mnreads ) and didn’t believe being a reviewer was as easy as asking. See, it really is that easy! LeAnn’s a librarian from St. Cloud who recently moved to our lovely Twin Cities to take classes at The Loft ...
    1 week ago
  • Super Hot Geek Of The Week – Actor: Paul Rudd


    Back2Stonewall.comAuthority Authority: 138
    Paul Rudd is a Geek. And a funny super hot geek at that. Paul Rudd was born in Passaic, New Jersey, the son of Jewish immigrants from England.Rudd made his breakout performance in the 1995 film Clueless. Additional credits include Wet Hot American Summer, Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers, The Cider House Rules, ...
    1 week ago
  • Othello | Opera review


    The Guardian - guardian.co.ukAuthority Authority: 986
    Argyle Works, Birmingham Graham Vicks latest production with Birmingham Opera Company takes place in a former engineering works, but it is not so much site-specific as emotion-specific. This is an Othello which gets you in the heart and the guts. Vicks conception also insinuates itself, in the manner of Iago, into ...
    1 week ago
  • a world about whose values he was so often skeptical


    Radigan Neuhalfen's Web LogAuthority Authority: 415
    "Melville himself said in Moby Dick , to write a mighty book you must have a mighty theme. Here he had it -- the rebellious struggle of Captain Ahab against the overwhelming, mysterious vastness of the universe and its awesome, sometimes merciless forces.... "What baffled its early readers was the books wild ...
    1 week ago
  • New York exhibition of books and manuscripts


    Medieval Material Culture BlogAuthority Authority: 128
    Sotheby’s New York is displaying items from an upcoming auction — which will feature a first-edition copy of the “medieval Euclid,” along with 17th century editions of works by Shakespeare and Cervantes — through December 10.
    1 week ago
  • My Mistress eyes are Raven Black


    Stupid and ContagiousAuthority Authority: 453
      Therefore my mistress eyes are raven black, Her eyes so suited, and they mourners seem At such who, not born fair, no beauty lack, Slandring creation with a false esteem. Yet so they mourn, becoming of their woe, That every tongue says beauty should look so. from Shakespeares Sonnet 127 ...
    1 week ago
  • Twilight, New Moon, and the Gauntlet of Book-to-Movie Adaptations.


    Freelance Writing Collaborative Blogging Project by Rebecca Laffar-SmithAuthority Authority: 120
    For decades, books and movies have fought for the pleasure of our leisure time. From hits to classics, they’ve been marketed in similar ways and promoted with similar means. Sometimes, when a movie had reached particular acclaim it would be adapted into a book, but more commonly, the movie industry takes up the ...
    1 week ago
  • William Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet, from the 
American Shakespeare Center, at UMass Amherst


    Berkshire Review for the ArtsAuthority Authority: 421
    For over twenty years, the American Shakespeare Center (formerly the Shenandoah Shakespeare Express) has been pursuing a distinctive style of production, marked by speed and intimacy. The troupe attempts to recreate the conditions of Shakespeare’s theater, including universal lighting, minimal sets, and on-stage ...
    1 week ago
  • Dueling CHUTZPAH


    Net News PublisherAuthority Authority: 448
    This seems to have become a week when, to paraphrase the words that William Shakespeare assigned to King Lear, chutzpah will come of chutzpah . The events in question are unfolding in the United Kingdom over a matter that has become all too familiar here in the United States, the payment of bonuses to those in ...
    1 week ago
  • SOBs Favorite Shows Of The Noughties: #22 - Twelfth Night


    Steve On Broadway (SOB)Authority Authority: 468
    SOBs Favorite Shows Of The Noughties: #22 - Twelfth Night (2009, Delacorte Theatre, Central Park, New York, New York) Introduction: Hard as it is to comprehend that were already 119 months into this "new" millennium, we are fast approaching the end of its first decade. While we have yet to agree on what exactly we ...
    1 week ago
  • Links for 12.3.09: I don’t care for Farmville.


    the listenerdAuthority Authority: 423
    * The Web : Did Vladimir Nabokov invent the emoticon? As I have mentioned before, the only emoticon I ever use is the emotionless one. And the side hugs, of course. * Bowie on Bowie : Check out this letter written by a 20-year-old David Bowie to a young American fan in 1967. Nipple antennae. [ stereogum !?] * ...
    1 week ago
  • Inghilterra: archeologi rovistano tra i rifiuti di Shakespeare


    DaringToDo.comAuthority Authority: 147
    Stratford-upon-Avon , nel cuore delle Midlands Occidentali, Regno Unito, contea del Warwickshire. Sarebbe un luogo insignificante se non fosse che qui nacque, nel 1564, e morì, nel 1616 il più grande poeta di lungua inglese d’ogni tempo, e probabilmente il più grande poeta in assoluto: William Shakespeare . E ...
    1 week ago
  • What are your five favourite books?


    News PoliticsAuthority Authority: 142
    My list changes every time I’m asked the question. You can listen here to the titles I gave, by podcast, to the bibliophile website keebra.com. Playing the recording for the first time, I shake my head wonderingly at my failure to include anything by either PG Wodehouse or Evelyn Waugh. No doubt, in a couple [...]
    1 week ago
  • More strange than true: I never may believe by William Shakespeare


    Poem of the DayAuthority Authority: 121
    Saved by my poetry buddy again! He sent an excerpt from this, but I decided to post the whole speech by Theseus. More strange than true: I never may believe FROM A MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM, ACT V, SCENE I By William Shakespeare More strange than true: I never may believe These antique fables, nor these fairy ...
    2 weeks ago
  • Self-Injury: Does it Matter What Its Called?


    BlogsAuthority Authority: 161
      Whats in a Name? In Romeo and Juliet, William Shakespeare wrote the now infamous lines, "Whats in a name? That which we call a rose By any other name would smell as sweet." Although Shakespeare might argue that a name holds little meaning, those studying topics such as self-injury might think a bit differently. ...
    2 weeks ago

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