Shakespeare 

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  • Ann Hathaway’s Cottage Stratford Upon Avon

  • the appearance of the ghost of Hamlet’s father – in Dutch

  • Anyone who finds himself asking, “To be, or not to be?” is probably troubled, right? It’s not so much that a person has difficulty making decisions, as it is a problem of over-analyzing everything. For instance, would a sane man be thinking that if we used a different name for a rose, it would still smell as sweet? Nope, don’t think so. But to have those words spoken by poor Juliet who is in a sudden hormone-driven love for the guy below her balcony, is putting waaaaaaaaaaaay too much analysis into the situation… or maybe she was just hinting to Romeo who, like a typical hormone-driven teenage guy, should go find a rose for her. Ooooops… here I am analyzing the play :) I wonder if I should even be a member of this group… hmmmm, to be or not to be? That is the question.

  • Copyright © 2008 John Powell. / All Rights Reserved. Best Viewed Large Shakespeare was born and raised in Stratford-upon-Avon, producing most of his known works there between 1590 and 1613. Shakespeare was a respected poet and playwright in his own day, but his reputation did not rise to its present heights until the nineteenth century.

  • The image is a blend (perspective) of Trinity Church, Stratford. We were in Stratford only the other day, a few of us managed to sit in line just-in-case the RSC’s performance of Hamlet had any cancellations. And there were, a minute before the doors shut they ran ou with another four tickets allowing the group I was in to go in and sit only a few rows back and in touching distance from David Tennant… Anyhoo, this is not n exact image of the church, it’s less round than this, but I really liked how it came out. Trinity Church is the site of the grave of the poet and playwright William Shakespeare.

  • Another image from my brief time in the UK, I’m actually a bit miffed at the moment that not many of my great photo opportunities worked out, the weather was dodgy so the sky was very bland, and my focusing wasn’t that fantastic, which might or might not have been due to a dirty lens… I did learn lots however, and I really really want to buy a couple of new lenses to play with… This is a photo of the Guild Chapel, Stratford-upon-Avon. And, like the other one of Trinity Church this is an image made out of a number of images blended together…

  • “One touch of nature makes the whole world kin.” / – William Shakespeare

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  • this is a photo of a statue of william shakespeare located in central park. the photo was taken with a nikon d60, camera settings: f20, iso 560, exposure time 1/200, focal length 20mm

  • Nestled on London’s South Bank, the Globe Theare faithfully recreates the experience of going to see a play in Shakespearian England. The unique timber architecture of the building is captured here in several exposures, steamlessly stitched together to produce a ‘fisheye’ image.

  • Romeo, O Romeo, wherefore…......seems to enter my mind whenever I come across these structures. “Brush up your Shakespeare, start quoting hinm now…..”

  • This is from the series on my Tiny Theatre blog, and shows Hamlet and Ophelia in the third act just after he tells her to “Get thee to a nunnery”.

  • Church of the Holy Trinity, Stratford-upon-Avon, UK. The place of the baptism and burial of William Shakespeare

  • From a ferry trip I made last weekend from Swedish Helsingborg to Danish Helsingör. If you look close or “large” you can see I was lucky enough to get the ferry named “Hamlet” in this picture!! Ha ha, that made it too easy of course to answer my Bubble Jeopardy question. Congrats Stuart and runners up!! In Shakespeares play “HAMLET” the plot takes place in the castle of “Elsinore”, the present day Helsingör castle also called “Kronborg”. A viking named Amled is buried in Danish Ammalshede and the story of his life, written down around 1200 by Saxo Grammaticus, gave rise to numerous performances by travelling theatre companies in Europe. Shakespeare kept to the original quite well. The Amled saga / tells of a king called “Rurik” who lived around 500 AD, and the name Amled can be derived from an old Nordic word for “madness”. Just wanted to give you a piece of ignored information here! :)

  • a timeless quote from William Shakespeare

  • Controversy still rages over the authorship of Shakespeare’s works, even to the point of questioning whether the poet who penned the sonnets is the same as the prolific playwright who created some of the greatest dramas of world literature. Whatever the case, there is no doubt that the 154 sonnets published as being by SHAKE-SPEARE, to use the spelling and type-setting on the title page of the original 1609 Quarto, contain some of the most perfect poems ever written in the English language. Sonnet 97 expresses the pain of separation from a loved one. The poet writes of how the time has seemed like winter, even though it has in fact been through the summer and autumn. I hope the chosen image echoes the feelings of winter, which, when viewed from the early 21st century comfort of computer screens in centrally-heated houses and generally insulated existence, represents a contradiction that matches the sonnet’s own enigma. This could make a really unusual, stylish and therefore classy Valentine’s Day card.

  • New Mexico ghost town of Shakespeare. / Featured in Goldrush and Ghost Towns Nov. 2009. / !

  • shakespear mistake

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