William Shakespeare — "How now, thou crusty batch of nature! What's the news?"
How now, thou crusty batch of nature! What's the news?
How now, thou crusty batch of nature! What's the news?
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"I am sick when I do look on thee."
"We are time's subjects, and time bids be gone."
"You have a February face, so full of frost, of storm and cloudiness."
"I say there is no darkness but ignorance."
"The cat will mew, and dog will have his day."
English playwright and poet whose 39 plays and 154 sonnets are the most-performed and most-translated body of work in world literature. Closely associated with Christopher Marlowe (early Elizabethan rival) and Ben Jonson (later contemporary, friendly rival, and his first eulogist). For an intellectual contrast, see the Puritan stage-banning movement, the English Christian campaign against the theater — Puritans agitated against playhouses throughout Shakespeare's career and finally closed all London theaters in 1642 after the Civil War — they remained shut for 18 years. Shakespeare's career thrived in the brief Elizabethan-Jacobean window between religious tolerance and Puritan ascendancy.
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