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Through his researches in the rich archive of 16th and 17th century
manuscripts and documents at the Middle Temple in London, where he
is a senior barrister, Anthony Arlidge has revealed that
Shakespeare's Twelfth Night was commissioned for performance there
in 1602. Middle Temple Hall is the only building surviving from
Shakespeare's time where it is known that one of his plays had its
first night. He shows that, with its many legal references and
'inn-jokes', Twelfth Night was almost certainly written for an
audience of lawyers. The Middle Temple was in fact full of talented
young poets and playwrights at the time -- John Webster, John Ford
and John Marston, author of What You Will, amongst others -- and it
seems probable that Shakespeare knew some of them personally. Also,
a 'cousin' of Shakespeare's was a student in the Inn in 1602. Like
other Inns of Court, it had its own tradition of holding a feast of
'misrule' over the Christmas period, led by the Bright Prince of
Burning Love. Twelfth Night has many oblique references to such
festivities. That, for example, is the meaning in Italian of the
name of the important character Feste. The still extant text of the
Inn's 1597/8 festivities is included complete in an appendix. In
the course of the book, Anthony Arlidge describes in detail the
background of the contemporary legal world, and brings to life the
extravagant literary and social milieu of the Elizabethan Inns of
Court in all its complexity. Shakespeare and the Prince of Love is
written in such a way that it will have a strong appeal to the
general reader as well as to Shakespeare enthusiasts, students of
English literature and historians, for whom it will be an essential
acquisition.
No other nation's creation, both politically and socially, owes
such a debt to lawyers as the United States of America. This book
traces the story of that creation through the human lives of those
who played important parts in it: amongst others, of English
lawyers who established the form of the original colonies; of the
Founding Fathers, who declared independence and created a
Constitution; of Abraham Lincoln, Woodrow Wilson, Justices of the
Supreme Court and finally Barack Obama. Even Richard Nixon
features, if only as a reminder that even the President is subject
to the law. The author combines his wide legal experience and
engaging writing style to produce a book that will enthral lawyers
and laymen alike, giving perhaps a timely reminder of the
importance of the rule of law to American democracy.
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