William Shakespeare - The University of Birmingham - Edgbaston, Birmingham, U.K.
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Mike_bjm
N 52° 26.962 W 001° 55.846
30U E 572665 N 5811557
A life-size statue of William Shakespeare above the entrance to the Great Hall of the University of Birmingham.
Waymark Code: WM12J0W
Location: West Midlands, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 06/02/2020
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member fi67
Views: 4

A life-size statue of William Shakespeare the English Poet, dramatist, and actor above the entrance to the Great Hall of the University of Birmingham is one of 9 great men of the arts and science/engineering whose statues adorn the entrance.

That William Shakespeare qualified for the central position seem very appropriate given he is probably the greatest name in world of literature, an Englishman and a Midlander, however for a long tine in the planning phase King Edward VII was considered the frontrunner for this position.

Below is an extract from "The Victorian Web" website which describes the 9 Statues as follows:
"Nine cultural icons in a "Pantheon of the Immortals" Foster/Dungawell 243) carved over the entrance to the University of Birmingham's Great Hall. Henry Alfred Pegram (1862-1937). 1907. Life-size statues in Darley Dale stone. Chancellor's Court, the University of Birmingham, Edgbaston."
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William Shakespeare
"William Shakespeare, Shakespeare also spelled Shakespeare, byname Bard of Avon or Swan of Avon, (Baptised April 26, 1564, Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire, England - died April 23, 1616, Strafford-upon-Avon), English Poet, dramatist, and actor often called the English national poet and considered by many to be the greatest dramatist of all time." (visit link)

"Shakespeare is widely recognised at the greatest English Poet the world has ever known. Not only were his plays mainly written in verse, but he also penned 154 sonnets, two long narrative poems and a few minor poems. Today he has become a symbol of poetry and writing internationally."

"Shakespeare's Sonnet
154 of Shakespeare's sonnets are included in the volume of Shakespeare’s Sonnets, published by Thomas Thorpe in 1609. They are followed by the long poem 'A Lover's Complaint', which first appeared in that same volume after the sonnets. Six additional sonnets appear in his plays 'Romeo and Juliet', 'Henry V’ and 'Love's Labour's Lost.

Shakespeare's sonnets generally focus on the themes of love and life. The first 126 are directed to a young man whom the speaker urges to marry, but this man them becomes the object of the speaker's desire, The lst 28 sonnets are addressed to an older woman, the so-called 'dark lady', who causes both desire and loathing in speaker. However, several of the sonnets, if taken individually, may appear gender-neutral, as in the well-known 'Shall I compare thee to a summer's day' from Sonnet 18. The linear, sequential reading of the poems is also debatable, since it is unclear if Shakespeare intended for the sonnets to be published in this way.

While he may have experimented with the form earlier, Shakespeare most likely began sonnets seriously around 1592. What is now known as the Shakespearian sonnet is the English sonnet form Shakespeare popularised: fourteen lines of iambic pentameter (a ten-syllable pattern of alternating unaccented and accented syllables). The rhyme scheme breaks the poem into three quatrains (four lines each) and a couplet (two lines).

Shakespeare changed the world of poetry not only with his prolific use of this new form, but also in deviating from what was standard content. Instead of romantic fiction, written to an unattainable ideal woman, Shakespeare writes to a young man and a dark woman, who may or may not be attainable, and who arouse conflicting feelings in the speaker.

Shakespeare's Narrative Poems
Shakespeare's published two long poems, among his earliest successes: 'Venus and Adonis' in 1593 and 'The Rape of Lucrece' in 1594. These poems were dedicated to his patron the Earl of Southampton.

Venus and Adonis was Shakespeare's first published work. Modelled after the Roman Poet Ovid, it is a re-telling of the classical myth: Venus, the goddess of love, falls for a young mortal who dies after being attacked by a wild boar. Shakespeare interprets the myth comically as well as tragically, for Adonis continually resists Venus's desire. The poem is considered an experiment in delicate eroticism.

The Rape of Lucrene is also a long poem based on Ovid, but rather more serious, and based on history rather than myth. The story is the rape of Lucretia, wife of Collatinus, by Tarquinius Sextuss, son of the Roman King Tarquinius Superbus. Devastated and filled with shame, Lucretia stabs herself to death. The poem comments on the problems of masculine violence and institutionalised attitudes towards chastity.

Another of Shakespeare's poems 'The Phoenix and Turtle' was commissioned to be included in a collection by Robert Chester called 'Love's Martyr'(1601). The Oxford edition of the complete works (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1986) also includes as Shakespeare's various poems, some songs, and epitaphs."
(visit link)
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