British Shakespearean scholar JOHN DOVER WILSON (1881-1969) is best
remembered for his explications of the Bard, particularly his acclaimed
1935 work What Happens in Hamlet. Here, however, he takes a rather more
oblique approach to enlightening us to the world of Shakespeare,
gathering together in this 1913 volume writings by contemporaries of the
playwright's-some famous, some not-that illuminate the artistic society
and ordinary life of Elizabethan England. Discover what the firsthand
observers of the day thought about: - English snobbery - country
sports - festivals and revelry - superstition, ghosts, and astrology -
parenting and children - impressions of London - the plague - playhouses
and bear-gardens - the actor and his craft - house and home - rogues and
vagabonds - and much, much more