Absolutely not. The Globe Theatre regularly (and by this I mean daily) drew 3000 people to its performances, and there were a half-dozen or more playhouses as big as or (in the case of The Fortune) bigger than the Globe. That means 10 or 20 thousand people watching plays every day in a London which was much much smaller than it is now. That meant that there had to be theatre companies in each theatre and each company was looking for new material. Shakespeare was not the only person writing plays in his day; he was one of dozens. Kyd, Marlowe, Jonson, Greene, Massinger, Middleton, Webster, Beaumont, and Fletcher are just the most famous of these playwrights.
The Tempest
Hell is hell,it rings a bell!
The first quatrain of sonnet 84, William Shakespeare.
a disguised criticism of britain’s imperialist activities. APEXX
No it is not. A haiku is a form of Japanese poetry. Romeo and Juliet is a tragedy play written by William Shakespeare.
In England alone, about five million people lived at the same time as Shakespeare.
yes
The Tempest
I do not think newspapers as we know them existed in Shakespeare"s time, let alone that of his fictional young gangsters. The earliest known Newspaper , the Frankfurter Zeitung, Frankfurt times, dates to l6l5- after the death of Shakespeare.
Leave him alone for a while
Hell is hell,it rings a bell!
The first quatrain of sonnet 84, William Shakespeare.
a disguised criticism of britain’s imperialist activities. APEXX
No it is not. A haiku is a form of Japanese poetry. Romeo and Juliet is a tragedy play written by William Shakespeare.
The Tempest is considered to be the last play by William Shakespeare written alone by himself.
During raising their child, females have to live alone.
The male and female emu are of a very similar size. It is virtually impossible to tell the two apart by appearance alone.