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rachid zahir

VIP-Blog de rachidzahir
  • 62 articles publiés
  • 14 commentaires postés
  • 1 visiteur aujourd'hui
  • Créé le : 06/04/2006 13:39
    Modifié : 18/08/2011 02:24

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    chapter one

    16/05/2009 16:22

    chapter one


    I. Shakespeare’s biography:

    Despite the fact that Shakespeare is one of the greatest poets and playwrights, very little is actually known about him.
    “What we do know about his life comes from registrar records, court records, wills, marriage certificates and his tombstone”. <http://absoluteshakespeare.com/trivial/biography/shakespeare_biography.html>


    Mackail (1934) states that “of the life of Shakespeare little is known. No biography of him was attempted until nearly a century after his death” (p. 6)


    ƒæ William’s father:

    Ajajam(1963) writes that Shakespeare’s father was John Shakespeare. The latter was said to be a town official of Stratford, and a local business man who dabbled in leatherwork. John also dealt in grain. He was an important and a respected tradesman. He received a series of honourable civic appointments. His fortunes underwent a gloomy change. Besieged at home by his creditors, he made desperate attempts to raise money. As a result, John was obliged to depend on his wife’s relations to get their living. He died in 1601 (p.18).

    ƒæ William’s Mother:

    She was Mary Arden who married John Shakespeare in 1557. Being the youngest daughter in her family, she inherited much of her father’s landowning and farming estate when he died.
    <http://absoluteshakespeare.com/trivial/biography/shakespeare_biography.html>






    Ajajam (1963) says that she was like” the possessive matriarch portrayed in sons and lovers, a decidedly superior soul; whose ancestors included a sheriff of Warwickshire. Mary Shakespeare may sometimes have approached her husband with his lack of social grace, and have reminded him of the privileges and the opportunities that, through her marriage, she had been obliged to forfeit (p.18).

    What we may deduce from this is that the marriage of John and Mary was not that successful, supporting

    “The idea that great artists, like William Shakespeare, are frequently the product of ill-balanced marriage” Ajajam (1963. p.17).


    William Shakespeare was born on April 23rd, 1564. He was christened in Stratford church on the 26th. The records indicate that he was Mary and John’s third child. It is assumed that William died in 1616. Little is known about his childhood although it is generally assumed that he attended, nearly at the age of seven, the Local Grammar School, the king’s new school.
    Shakespeare did not attend University, which was not at all unusual for the time. University education was reserved for the sons of the wealthy elite. The next fact of William’s life is the licence, issued November 27/28th, 1582, for his marriage to Anne Hathaway, a daughter of a yeoman farmer in the Hamlet of Shottery in the Parish of old Stratford.
    <http://gradesaver.com/author/Shakespeare.>

    Ajajam (1963) states that Anne was, if dates given on her tombstone are correct, eight years older than William (p.27)





    ƒæ William’s Children, brothers and sisters:

    Baptism records show that William’s first child, Susanna was baptized in May 26th, 1583. Baptism records again reveal that twins Hamnet and Judith were born in February 1592. Hamnet and Judith were named after William’s close friends, Judith and Hamnet Sadler.
    William was the third child of John and Mary. The first two were daughters and William himself was followed by Gilbert who died in 1612 and Richard who died in 1613. Edmund (1582-1607), sixth in the line, was baptized on the third of May, 1580. William’s oldest living sister was Joan. Of William’s seven siblings only Judith and four of his brothers survived to adulthood.
    <http://absoluteshakespeare.com/trivial/biography/shakespeare_biography.html>

    ľ Did Shakespeare write the 37 plays and 154 sonnets credited to him?

    Recently, some academics who call themselves the Oxfords argue that William did not write any of the plays and the sonnets attributed to him. They suggest that he was merely a business man and propose several contenders for authorship, namely an Edward de Vere.
    <http://absoluteshakespeare.com/trivial/biography/shakespeare_biography.html>


    ľ Evidence that William Shakespeare wrote his plays and sonnets:

    The earliest proof that William did indeed write 37 plays was Robert Green’s criticism, Groathsworth of Wit (1592), in which he attacked Shakespeare for having the nerve to compete with him and other playwrights. Robert Green made this clear by calling William “an upstart crow”. This criticism was placed with the Stationers Registrar on the 20th of September, 1592. William’s reputation as a poet is again confirmed in 1598, when Francis Meres attacked him as being “mellifluous” and described his work as honey-tongued, “sugared sonnets among his private friends” in his own Palladis Tamia, 1592. Proof that William was an actor comes from his own performances before Queen Elizabeth herself in 1594 and evidence of William’s interest in theatre comes from his being listed in 1594 and 1595 as a shareholder of the Lord’s Chamberlain’s Company, a theatre company.
    <http://absoluteshakespeare.com/trivial/biography/shakespeare_biography.html>

    No one knows for certain how Shakespeare first started his career in the theatre, although several London players would visit Stratford regularly, and so, sometime between 1585 and 1592, it is probable that young Shakespeare could have been recruited by the Leicester's or Queen's men. Whether an acting troupe recruited Shakespeare in his hometown or he was forced on his own to travel to London to begin his career, he was nevertheless an established actor in the great city by the end of 1592.
    < http://www.shakespeare-online.com/biography/>


    Another proof that William Shakespeare authorized his plays was the first Folio (1623) in which Henry Condell and John Hemminges, who were actors in William’s theatre Company, claim in a dedicatory verse within the Folio that they recorded and collected his plays as a memorial to the late actor and playwright:

    “…It is not our province, who only gather his works and give them to you, to praise him. It is yours that read him…read him, therefore; and again and again; and if you then don’t like him, surely you are in manifest danger not to understand him. And so we leave him to other of his friends, whom, if you need, can be your guides; if you need them not, you can lead yourselves and others, and such readers we wish him.”(Chute, 1951, p.114)

    Their wish was answered because William got many readers and no other writer in the world’s history has been loved by so many people as William. All these evidence show clearly that W.Shakespeare was the author of his poetic and dramatic heritage.


    Around 1589, Shakespeare wrote his first play, Henry VI, Part I. After writing Richard III (1592), Henry VI, The Comedy of Errors (1592) and Titus Andronicus (1593) Shakespeare became a popular playwright by 1590. The year 1593, however, marked a major leap forward in his career. By the same year (1593), he gained the Earl of Southampton, to whom Shakespeare dedicated most of his sonnets, as his prominent patron, and Venus and Adonis was published. It remains one of the first of his known works to be printed and was a huge success. Next came The Rape of Lucrece, 1594. Concerning William’s sonnets, most scholars argue that the majority of them were probably written in 1590s. During the year he joined the Lord’s Chamberlain’s Men (1594), Shakespeare wrote Romeo and Juliet, along with Love’s Labour’s Lost, and the Taming of the Shrew and several other plays. Two of his greatest tragedies, Hamlet and Julius Caesar, followed around 1600. Othello was written around 1604.
    http://www.shakespeare-online.com/keydates/playchron.html
    http://gradesaver.com/author/Shakespeare

    William Shakespeare lived until 1616. His wife died in 1623 at the age of 67. He was buried in the Chancel of his church at Stratford. The lines above his tomb-allegedly written by Shakespeare himself-read:

    Good friend, for Jesus’ sake forbear
    To dig the dust enclosed here
    Blessed be the man who spares these stones
    And cursed be that who moves my bones.

    http://gradesaver.com/author/Shakespeare





    be wise

    05/02/2009 21:05

    be wise


    Be Wise

    To thy creator be grateful,
    For your being is not that shemeful
    To thine own self be true
    Be not confused ; thy heart sweetness is the clue

    The sun emerges ; the stars faint
    Thy creation is so great
    To thy sweet self be cordial
    To its innocence be not cruel

    Thy beauty grants thee loveliness
    My own heart wishes thee all happiness
    So, to thyself be fair
    As you are created with so much care



    Rachid Zahir 04-02-2009







    lust

    04/02/2009 21:43

    lust


    Lust

    Cursed be the one who, for lust’s sake,
    Many walls would disband.
    Blessed be that who, for heaven’s sake,
    Those broken walls would mend.

    Fool people to the murderous desire submit;
    To the bloody thing they cling.
    Wise people sacrifice and lustful joy forfeit,
    For the destructiveness it may bring.

    Blessed be that who honours his wife’s name
    Cursed be that who, on his family, brings shame.




    Rachid Zahir 29-01-2009






    visitor

    26/12/2008 22:08

    visitor


     

    The last visitor

    The unwanted visitor shall come
    At anytime, he may visit
    The voracious visitor shall show up,
    And from the household generosity shall benefit
    He is not as kind as other visitors may be,
    For he eats all that he can meet
    Boundless his voracity seems
    Fearful his darkness is.

    Life is his forest, and he is the hunter
    With his cruel hands, he suffocates the souls
    With his subtle ways, he starts the blaze
    With neither nets nor hooks, he fishes
    With neither fights nor weapons, he kills
    With neither arrows nor rifles, he hunts
    With no appointments, all creatures shall
    Have the honour to receive this inevitable visitor

     Rachid Zahir      09/ dec/ 2008






    the beast

    29/08/2008 22:43



         the beast

    I will not knock on your door
    I will not beg you anymore
    I will not disturb my dreams
    I will not play your games
     
    go to hell
    and never look back,
    as you will not find me there
    awaiting you, trembling, as i used to
    you will not touch me
    you can't scare me
     
    I"m so brave today
    and I refuse to decay
    Allah doesn't like it
    my people shiver on seeing it
     
    oh! my lovers!
    It is hard leaving you alone
    It is hard being on my own
    It is hard to let you down
     
    By  rachid zahir  settat  29 aug 2008 22:15






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