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James Shirley (or Sherley) (September 1596 - October 29, 1666), was an English dramatist. He belonged to the great period of English dramatic literature, but, in Lamb's words, he "claims a place among the worthies of this period, not so much for any transcendent genius in himself, as that he was the last of a great race, all of whom spoke nearly the same language and had a set of moral feelings and notions in common." His career of play writing extended from 1625 to the suppression of stage plays by parliament in 1642. September is the ninth month of the year in the Gregorian Calendar and one of four Gregorian months with the length of 30 days. ...
Events February 5 - 26 catholics crucified in Nagasaki, Japan. ...
October 29 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia /**/ @import /skins-1. ...
Events September 2 - Great Fire of London: A large fire breaks out in London in the house of Charles IIs baker on Pudding Lane near London Bridge. ...
Royal motto: Dieu et mon droit (French: God and my right) Englands location within the UK Official language English de facto Capital London de facto Largest city London Area - Total Ranked 1st UK 130,395 km² Population - Total (2001) - Density Ranked 1st UK 49,138,831 377/km² Ethnicity...
A dramatist is an author of dramatic compositions, usually plays. ...
Charles Lamb (1775- 27 July 1834) was an English essayist, best known for his Essays of Elia and for the childrens book Tales from Shakespeare, which he produced along with his sister, Mary Lamb. ...
Events March 27 - Prince Charles Stuart becomes King Charles I of England, Scotland and Ireland. ...
Events January 4 - Charles I attempts to arrest five leading members of the Long Parliament, but they escape. ...
Shirley was born in London. He was educated at Merchant Taylors' School, St John's College, Oxford, and St Catharine's College, Cambridge, where he took his B.A. degree in or before 1618. St. ...
Merchant Taylors crest Merchant Taylors School is a British public school, located in Northwood in the London Borough of Hillingdon. ...
St Johns College is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom. ...
Full name Collegium sive aula D. Catharinæ in Universitate Cantabrigiensi Motto - Named after St Catharine of Alexandria Previous names Katharine Hall (1473-1860) Established 1473 Sister College Worcester College Master Prof. ...
Events March 8 - Johannes Kepler discovers the third law of planetary motion (he soon rejects the idea after some initial calculations were made but on May 15 confirms the discovery). ...
His first poem, Echo, or the Unfortunate Lovers (of which no copy is known, but which is probably the same as Narcissus of 1646), was published in 1618. After proceeding to M.A. he was, Wood says, "a minister of God's word in or near St Albans." In consequence apparently of his conversion to the Roman Catholic faith he left his living, and was master of St Albans grammar school from 1623-1625. His first play, Love Tricks, seems to have been written while he was teaching at St Albans. He removed in 1625 to London, where he lived in Gray's Inn, and for eighteen years from that time he was a prolific writer for the stage, producing more than thirty regular plays, tragedies and comedies, and showing no sign of exhaustion when a stop was put to his occupation by the Puritan edict of 1642. The Roman Catholic Church, most often spoken of simply as the Catholic Church, is the largest Christian church, with over one billion members. ...
Events March 27 - Prince Charles Stuart becomes King Charles I of England, Scotland and Ireland. ...
Grays Inn is one of the four Inns of Court in around the Royal Courts of Justice in London, England to which barristers belong and where they are called to the bar. ...
The Puritans were members of a group of radical Protestants which developed in England after the Reformation. ...
Shirley's sympathies were with the king in his disputes with parliament and he received marks of special favour from the queen. He made a bitter attack on Prynne, who had attacked the stage in Histriomastix, and, when in 1634 a special masque was presented at Whitehall by the gentlemen of the Inns of Court as a practical reply to Prynne, Shirley supplied the text--The Triumph of Peace. Between 1636 and 1640 Shirley went to Ireland, under the patronage apparently of the earl of Kildare. Three or four of his plays were produced by his friend John Ogilby in Dublin in the theatre in Werburgh Street, the first ever built in Ireland and at the time of Shirley's visit only one year old. On the outbreak of war he seems to have served with the earl of Newcastle, but when the king's fortunes began to decline he returned to London. He owed something to the kindness of Thomas Stanley, but supported himself chiefly by teaching, publishing some educational works under the Commonwealth. Besides these he published during the period of dramatic eclipse four small volumes of poems and plays, in 1646, 1653, 1655 and 1659. He "was a drudge" for Ogilby in his translations of the Iliad and the Odyssey, and survived into the reign of Charles II, but, though some of his comedies were revived, he did not again attempt to write for the stage. Wood says that he and his second wife died of fright and exposure after the great fire, and were buried at St Giles's-in-the-Fields on the 29th of October 1666. William Prynne (1600 - October 24, 1669) was a Puritan opponent of the church policy of Archbishop of Canterbury William Laud. ...
Whitehall, London, looking south towards the Houses of Parliament For other places with the same name see Whitehall (disambiguation) Whitehall is a road in London, the capital of the United Kingdom, running two-thirds of the distance from Trafalgar Square towards Parliament Square; the other third constitutes Parliament Street. ...
Dublin (Irish: Baile Ãtha Cliath),is the capital and largest city of the Republic of Ireland, located near the midpoint of Irelands east coast, at the mouth of the River Liffey and at the centre of the Dublin region. ...
Thomas Stanley may refer to one of several people: Thomas_Stanley,_1st_Earl_of_Derby, a fifteenth century English aristocrat, Thomas Bahnson Stanley, a 1950s governor of Virginia. ...
The Commonwealth was the republican government which ruled first England and then the whole of Britain, Ireland, the colonies and other Crown possessions during the periods from 1649 (the monarch Charles I being beheaded on January 30 and An Act declaring England to be a Commonwealth being passed by the...
John Ogilby (1600-1676) was a British writer and cartographer. ...
The Iliad (Greek ἸλιάÏ, Ilias) tells part of the story of the siege of the city of Ilium, i. ...
The Odyssey (Greek á½Î´Ï
ÏÏεία) is the second of the two great Greek epic poems ascribed to Homer, the first of which is the Iliad. ...
Charles II (29 May 1630â6 February 1685) was the King of England, Scotland, and Ireland from 30 January 1649 (de jure) or 29 May 1660 (de facto) until his death. ...
London, as it appeared from Bankside, Southwark, During the Great Fire - Derived from a Print of the Period by Visscher The Great Fire of London was a major fire that swept through the City of London from September 2nd to September 5th, 1666, and resulted more or less in the...
Shirley was born to great dramatic wealth, and he handled it freely. He constructed his own plots out of the abundance of materials that had been accumulated during thirty years of unexampled dramatic activity. He did not strain after novelty of situation or character, but worked with confident ease and buoyant copiousness on the familiar lines, contriving situations and exhibiting characters after types whose effectiveness on the stage had been proved by ample experience. He spoke the same language with the great dramatists, it is true, but this grand style is sometimes employed for the artificial elevation of commonplace thought. "Clear as day" becomes in this manner "day is not more conspicuous than this cunning"; while the proverb "Still waters run deep" is ennobled into--"The shallow rivers glide away with noise--The deep are silent." The violence and exaggeration of many of his contemporaries left him untouched. His scenes are ingeniously conceived, his characters boldly and clearly drawn; and he never falls beneath a high level of stage effect. Shirley's tragedies are: - The Maides Revenge (acted, 1626; printed, 1639)
- The Traytor (licensed, 1631; printed, 1635), which Dyce reckoned as Shirley's best tragedy
- Love's Crueltie (1631; printed, 1640)
- The Duke's Mistris (acted, 1636; printed, 1638)
- The Polititian (acted, 1639; printed, 1655)
- The Cardinal (acted, 1641; printed, 1652), a good example of Shirley's later style, and characterized by Edmund Gosse as perhaps the last great play produced by the giants of the Elizabethan age.
His comedies are: Alexander Dyce (June 30, 1798 - May 15, 1869) was a Scottish dramatic editor and literary historian. ...
Edmund William Gosse (September 21, 1849 - May 16, 1928) was an English poet, author and critic, the son of Philip Henry Gosse. ...
- Love Tricks, or the School of Complement (licensed, 1625; printed under the latter title, 1631)
- The Wedding (licensed, 1626; printed, 1629)
- The Brothers (acted, 1626; printed, 1652)
- The Wittie Faire One (acted, 1628; printed, 1633)
- The Gratefull Servant (licensed in 1629 as The Faithful Servant; printed, 1630)
- Changes: Or Love in a Maze (acted and printed, 1632)
- Hide Parke (acted, 1632; printed, 1637)
- The Ball (acted, 1632; printed, 1639)
- The Bird in a Cage (acted and printed, 1633), ironically dedicated to William Prynne
- The Young Admirall (licensed, 1633; printed, 1637)
- The Gamester (played at court, 1634; printed, 1637), executed at the command of Charles I who is said to have invented or proposed the plot; The Example (acted, 1634; printed, 1637)
- The Opportunity (licensed, 1634; printed, 1640)
- The Coronation (licensed, 1635, as his, but printed, 1640, as by Fletcher)
- The Lady of Pleasure (licensed, 1635; printed, 1637)
- The Constant Maid, or Love will find out the Way, printed in 1640 under the former title with St Patrick for Ireland
- The Royall Master (acted and printed, 1638), an excellent comedy of intrigue, with an epilogue addressed to Strafford
- The Doubtfull Heir (printed, 1652), licensed as Rosania, or Love's Victory in 1640
- The Gentleman of Venice (licensed, 1639; printed, 1655)
- The Imposture (acted, 1640; printed, 1652)
- The Sisters (licensed, 1642; printed, 1653)
- The Humorous Courtier (perhaps identical with The Duke, licensed, 1631), printed, 1640
- The Court Secret (printed, 1653).
Poems (1646), by James Shirley, contained "Narcissus," and a masque dealing with the Judgment of Paris, entitled The Triumph of Beautie. A Contention for Honour and Riches (1633) appeared in an altered and enlarged form in 1659 as Honoria and Mammon. In 1653 a selection of his pieces was published as Six New Playes. He wrote the magnificent entertainment presented by the members of the Inns of Court to the king and queen in 1633, entitled The Triumph of Peace, the scenery being devised by Inigo Jones and the music by W Lawes and Simon Ives. In this kind of composition he had no rival but Ben Jonson. His Contention of Ajax and Ulysses (printed, 1659) closes with the well-known lyric, "The Glories of our Blood and State." Charles I (19 November 1600â30 January 1649) was King of England, Scotland and Ireland from 27 March 1625, until his death. ...
Inigo Jones, by Sir Anthony van Dyck Inigo Jones (July 15, 1573âJune 21, 1652) is regarded as the first significant English architect. ...
Benjamin Jonson (June 11, 1572 – August 6, 1637) was an English Renaissance dramatist, poet and actor. ...
The standard edition of Shirley's works is The Dramatic Works and Poems of James Shirley, with Notes by William Gifford, and Additional Notes, and some Account of Shirley and his Writings, by Alexander Dyce (6 vols., 1833). A selection of his plays was edited (1888) for the "Mermaid" series, with an introduction by Edmund Gosse. Wikiquote has a collection of quotations by or about: This article incorporates text from the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica, which is in the public domain. Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name. ...
Wikiquote is a sister project of Wikipedia, using the same MediaWiki software. ...
The Eleventh Edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica (1911), contend supporters, in many ways represents the sum of knowledge at the beginning of the 20th century. ...
The public domain comprises the body of all creative works and other knowledge—writing, artwork, music, science, inventions, and others—in which no person or organization has any proprietary interest. ...
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