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Shakespeare's Other Son? (Hardback)

William Davenant, Playwright, Civil War Gun Runner and Restoration Theatre Manager

Military P&S History > British History P&S History > By Century > 17th Century P&S History > Social History

By R. E. Pritchard
Imprint: Pen & Sword Military
Pages: 232
Illustrations: 20 mono
ISBN: 9781399093491
Published: 17th March 2022

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Sir William Davenant (1606-1668) was in his time widely known as 'Davenant the Poet'. The son of an Oxford vintner (or quite possibly the natural son of his godfather, William Shakespeare), he wrote poems for and about the Court of Charles I, and, despite losing his nose to mercury treatment for the clap, which other people thought funny, went on to replace Ben Jonson as Poet Laureate and collaborate with Inigo Jones in composing spectacular Court masques, as well as writing many successful plays -- a few fashionably blood-thirsty, most showing a real comic gift, humanity and sympathy with 'ordinary life'.

In the Civil War, he earned a knighthood as an especially successful gun-runner for the Royalists, before escaping to Paris, where he worked on an epic poem. Then sent off by Charles II to colonize Virginia but captured by the Parliamentarians, he escaped execution but was imprisoned for five years. With the Restoration, he practically re-invented English theatre, with the first English opera, women actors, movable scenery and the proscenium arch, as well as reviving interest in Shakespeare with inventive adaptations. Energetic, affable and resilient, he was an appealing and well-liked character.

Celebrated and important in his day, Davenant is now surprisingly little known. This enterprising study introduces modern readers to his wit, poetry, and growing scepticism as to Court and aristocratic values, and his developing feminist sympathies. Here, select excerpts and summaries bring this entertaining writer to a new, wider audience.

I studied theatre and have always been fascinated by that world, one which Shakespeare is a big part of. I thought this book would be interesting as I realised I didn't know anything about his life, as I didn't know he had a son, let along a connection with a god son that could have also been his.
This book is about that 'other son' and his life and career in the arts as well. As someone who had achieved a lot, I was surprised that he isn't really known or talked about.
I found this book to be an interesting read, if you enjoy Shakespeare you will be more likely to enjoy this book as well as if you are interested in the theatre world.

For the Love of Books

About R. E. Pritchard

Born in India, the late R.E. Pritchard read English at Balliol College, Oxford, before becoming a lecturer at Keele University. He has published widely on a range of sixteenth- and seventeenth-century subjects, from Shakespeare’s England to the court of Charles II.

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