We've been converting the back bedroom into a study for Ailz. She's got a TV in there so she can watch the Shakespeare plays she's studying. And yesterday we went to IKEA and bought her a flat-pack bookcase. I'm good with flat-packs. This one has its shelves supported on metal pegs. I opened the packet and one of the pegs leapt out, bounced joyously and went down a gap in the floorbooards. Never mind. Ailz produced a magnet on an extending thing like a radio aerial and we had the little bugger out again in no time.
This is going to be our year of Shakespeare. Already we go to bed and lie there talking about the Sonnets and how Shakey reportedly drank himself to death in the company of Ben Jonson and Michael Drayton and what silly wankers the Oxfordians are and other significant matters arising.
I'm reading the Lodger. It's about a law case Shakey got involved in while lodging with a Hugenot family in Cripplegate. It's like you're circumambulating him. There he is, sitting in his study bedroom with the MS of All's Well That Ends Well spread out on the table, and you can almost reach him but not quite. It's frustrating how much we know about his world- like who his neighbours were and what they did for a living- and how little about the man himself.
This is going to be our year of Shakespeare. Already we go to bed and lie there talking about the Sonnets and how Shakey reportedly drank himself to death in the company of Ben Jonson and Michael Drayton and what silly wankers the Oxfordians are and other significant matters arising.
I'm reading the Lodger. It's about a law case Shakey got involved in while lodging with a Hugenot family in Cripplegate. It's like you're circumambulating him. There he is, sitting in his study bedroom with the MS of All's Well That Ends Well spread out on the table, and you can almost reach him but not quite. It's frustrating how much we know about his world- like who his neighbours were and what they did for a living- and how little about the man himself.
no subject
Date: 2008-01-19 01:30 am (UTC)Is Ailz taking a Shakespeare survey course or a specialized one?
I remember my first Shakespeare course. I dreaded it but had to take it as part of my English Major. What I got was a marvellous professor who "opened the book" for me. Although I was not required to take the second semester, I volunteered for it. Now, several years later this new opportunity arose - to study Shakespeare with the very best Humanities/History teacher I have ever had. I also have another class with the same professor this semester -- "Pagan Reason to Christian Revelation", and in the past have studied 5th Century Athens and Imperial Rome with him. There remains only one more class which he teaches, and I will take it next fall: "Dante, the Divine Comedy in a Historical-Sociological Context".
no subject
Date: 2008-01-19 03:10 pm (UTC)I love Shakespeare. I'm not sure quite how I first encountered him- probably through acting in extracts from Julius Caesar and Macbeth at school. I was 11 or 12 and I got to do Mark Antony's Friends Romans, Countrymen speech in front of a hall full of doting parents. Bliss.