The Triumph of

William Shakespeare

Bard of Avon, Poet of England

Trapped under a totalitarian regime, where government censors attempt to stifle creativity and shackle truth, the poet William Shakespeare combines verse with virtue in his timeless plays – stories that charm his audiences and plays that educate Englishmen by entertaining them. Shakespeare’s plays speak of important moral and historical lessons which influence key social movements in England, and later impacted America and the Globe. See through Summa Shakespeare how a subversive, rebel writer becomes the eminent historian and entertainer of his time, and a poet for all ages.

Contents

Prelude

the Person

the Place

the Playwright

the Plays

the Prophet

Postlude

“If thou didst ever hold me in thy heart,
Absent thee from felicity awhile
And in this harsh world draw they breath in pain
To tell my story.”
– William Shakespeare

Next: Prelude