Why not add this to your book or post it to your site/blog?
Get thee glass eyes, and like a scurvy politician, seem to see the things thou dost not.
Shakespeare, William
Chat about this quote in the Village Inn
Share corrections or notes in the village Library
Excerpt from The Complete Works of William Shakespeare · This quote is tagged Politicians and Politics · Search on Google Books to find all references and sources for this quotation ·
Help your friends discover QB
A little bit about Shakespeare, William
Born ca. 1564 and died ca. 1616 during the Renaissance period (1450-1599). One of the greatest writers of all time, Shakespeare, the peerless poet of the Sonnets and the creator of such dramatic masterpieces as Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet, and King Lear, is a playwright of paradigmatic originality. In his discussion of the Western literary canon, critic Harold Bloom declared: "Shakespeare and Dante are the center of the Canon because they excel all other Western writer in cognitive acuity, linguistic energy, and power of invention." However, one could go a step further and suggest that Shakespeare defines the Western canon because he transcends it. If Shakespeare, as Ben Jonson declared, "was not of an age, but for all time," the great dramatist, one could argue, spoke to the ultimate concerns of humankind, regardless of period or cultural tradition. · Can we improve this biography? Post your version
More on the Author
These people bookmarked this quote:
More on the author
This quote around the web
Loading...
Powered by Google Blogs
More on this author