"Shakespeare has throughout sounded, as has no other great poet or dramatist on record, the note of royalty. His is a royal world. Shakespeare's royalistic thinking is, for the most part, patriotic, and his work from time to time spreads its wings in national prophecy. Royalty and England tend to involve each other, and these in turn involve strenuous themes of war and peace, order and disorder, conflicts of personal ambition and communal necessity, contrasts of tyranny and justice, the whole stamped by the chivalric symbol of Saint George and aspiring to Christian sanctions. This Shakespearian royalty, conceived in the reign of Elizabeth I, is not dead; it has lived since, within the story of Great Britain, and it is alive today, in the reign of Elizabeth II."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Poets from EnglandPlaywrights from EnglandActors from EnglandPoets from the United KingdomShakespeare
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
G. Wilson Knight, 'The Shakespearian Royalty', The Sovereign Flower: On Shakespeare as the Poet of Royalism together with related essays and indexes to earlier volumes (1958), p. 13
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/William_Shakespeare
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
William Shakespeare
1564 – 1616
englischer Dichter
362 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by William Shakespeare →
Related Quotes
"When daisies pied and violets blue, And lady-smocks all silver-white, And cuckoo-buds of yellow hue Do paint the mead…"
"And the poor beetle, that we tread upon, In corporal sufferance finds a pang as great As when a giant dies."
"A beastly ambition, which the gods grant thee t' attain to! If thou wert the lion, the fox would beguile thee; if tho…"
"Yet looks he like a king; behold, his eye, As bright as is the eagle's, lightens forth Controlling majesty."
"A substitute shines brightly as a king Until a king be by, and then his state Empties itself, as doth an inland brook…"
"Let us sit upon the ground And tell sad stories of the death of kings: How some have been depos'd, some slain in war,…"
"Ay, every inch a king."
"The king-becoming graces, As justice, verity, temperance, stableness, Bounty, perseverance, mercy, lowliness, Devotio…"
"Every subject's duty is the king's; but every subject's soul is his own."
"There's such divinity doth hedge a king, That treason can but peep to what it would."