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Cymbeline
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
108 posts | 39 read | 20 to read
Golden lads and girls all must, As chimney-sweepers, come to dust. Cymbeline Eminent Shakespearean scholars Jonathan Bate and Eric Rasmussen provide a fresh new edition of this classic tragedy in which nothing is as it seems. THIS VOLUME ALSO INCLUDES MORE THAN A HUNDRED PAGES OF EXCLUSIVE FEATURES: an original Introduction to Cymbeline incisive scene-by-scene synopsis and analysis with vital facts about the work commentary on past and current productions based on interviews with leading directors, actors, and designers photographs of key RSC productions an overview of Shakespeares theatrical career and chronology of his plays Ideal for students, theater professionals, and general readers, these modern and accessible editions from the Royal Shakespeare Company set a new standard in Shakespearean literature for the twenty-first century.
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Lindy
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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Last night I enjoyed a lively performance of Cymbeline at the Stratford Festival in Ontario.

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Dogearedcopy
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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🎭 So, yeah— I fell off the #Shakespeare2020Project back in March and never really was able to get back on track. But I will nonetheless do what I can in terms of reading the Tragedies before year‘s end and; keep The Bard in my reading rotation for the foreseeable future!

I‘m about to start this crazy banana pants play that features [checks notes] death, deception, romance and a HEA (?!)

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Lcsmcat
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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Cuilin
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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Fear no more the heat o‘ the sun,
Nor the furious winter‘s rages;

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Daisey
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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Pickpick

Last week I saw this play at Boston Common, and it was so much fun. Then I listened to the audiobook. It has plenty of twists and turns so seeing it as well as listening gave me a better chance to catch more of the details. There were pieces that reminded me of several other Shakespeare plays, and I really enjoyed how all of them came together in the end. Most of his plays I‘ve read have been tragedies, so this was a nice change.

#LiteraryTourism

tpixie What an awesome experience!! And multisensory!! 5y
Daisey @tpixie It really was! It's been a long time since I've actually gotten to watch a Shakespeare play live and this was with friends so we had great discussion afterwards as well. 5y
tpixie @Daisey what a great trip!! 5y
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IndoorDame
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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This lesser known Shakespeare piece was originally one of the tragedies, now thought of as a comedy or romance. I have never read it, but saw a great "Shakespeare in the park" performance last night. The play itself has some strange plot points and is not my favorite of the plays, but this was a really fabulous performance! Any Littens who are around Boston this weekend should go check it out - it's free at the Commons for the next few nights.

Daisey I also went to see this while in Boston last week and agree it is a great performance! (edited) 5y
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Emilymdxn
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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#wondrouswednesday @Eggs

1. I‘ve read more Shakespeare since starting at the globe but I definitely need to do more!

2. I never read self help but my friend got be a Brene Brown book and it was really good.

3. I think it was called The Power of Vulnerability and I definitely recommend it

4. I barely read for pleasure during my 3 year degree, but I did get a lot of pleasure out of course reading so idk if that counts

5. @Caterina 😘

Eggs Love your responses! 6y
julesG Of course does it count when you enjoy course reading. That's so much better than dull textbooks that you need to plough through with triple shot latte and matchsticks to keep your eyes open. 6y
suzisteffen LORD, Cymbeline. WHAT A MESS. A glorious mess. The Oregon Shakespeare Fest did a Cymbeline in 2014 that was pretty amazing slash a deep mess. 6y
Caterina Thanks for tagging me! 😘 How cool to be working at the Globe, I didn't know that! I would be reading a lot of Shakespeare too. And I love Brené Brown. All her books are basically the same, but the first one I read was FANTASTIC. She has a Netflix special up now! 6y
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jpmcwisemorgan
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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TiredLibrarian Good one! 6y
Lcsmcat Excellent pick! 6y
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Emilymdxn
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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Pickpick

Ive officially read 25/37 traditionally canon Shakespeare plays now! Trying to get through all of them while I‘m working at the Globe! Adored this, the problem plays are my absolute favourites

Palimpsest Working at the Globe?? Sounds truly amazing! I‘ve only read ten of his plays. Makes me feel a lot less dedicated to the Bard than I thought I was! 😉 6y
Emilymdxn @Palimpsest thank you!! There‘s plenty of time for Shakespeare left for both of us - we‘ll get there 6y
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Lcsmcat
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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This lovely text has been set to music by Vaughan-Williams (and probably others.) #fear #poetrymatters @LazyDays

LazyDays I enjoyed this deeply. Thank you for sharing.💗 6y
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Lcsmcat
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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readinginthedark
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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Okay, last post about Cymbeline before I move on to As You Like It, I promise. The movie was so good! A very different experience from reading the play, primarily because all humorous parts have been cut out and the story is set around a drug kingpin and his family/court. I thought the casting was fantastic, although Ethan Hawke was a strange Iachimo. And here‘s an interesting article!: http://www.salisbury.edu/lfq/_issues/45_3/keep_your_head.html

batsy Thanks for sharing that article; I just skimmed through, looks fascinating. I haven't had a chance to watch the movie yet; have just emerged from a Crime & Punishment fog of awe 😆 I will try to watch it within the next few days because I'm really curious about how it holds up without the humorous bits (I found the play really funny) & the historical aspect. And then on to As You Like It! I'm so behind 😬 7y
InLibrisVeritas I'm quite curious to see what a serious version would be like. 7y
readinginthedark @batsy 😆I get that! I barely had time to watch it the other day and was interrupted four times to solve minor crises for the five-year-old. 7y
readinginthedark @batsy @InLibrisVeritas There was a noticeable difference in a few characters (primarily Cloten) and scenes without the humor. And the deaths and battles seem especially horrifying this way. 7y
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InLibrisVeritas
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
Mehso-so

What even...This one had one too many curve balls being thrown. Honestly most of it would have been fine except for the random inclusion of family not previous established. This went full on soap-opera really quickly and just never recovered.
Is it supposed to be funny?
#shakespearereadalong

I'll be starting As You Like It today sometime.

CSeydel I found it funny. Whether it was intended to be, I don‘t know, but it amused me! 7y
InLibrisVeritas @CSeydel It made me feel like I needed to make popcorn. It was like a well written episode of Maury or something. 7y
GingerAntics It‘s always been grouped in with the Tragedies, but not sure why with the “happy” ending. Was I the only one who thought Cymbeline was kind of a jerk who suddenly changed his mind on EVERYTHING as soon as his crazy wife was dead? Was he afraid of her? What the feck people? 7y
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InLibrisVeritas @GingerAntics I know! Like the ending was so oddly happy and completely wrapped up, like they didn't just have a full conversation about murder and kidnapping. 7y
GingerAntics @InLibrisVeritas exactly! Normally I would say “that‘s Shakespeare for you,” but it seems like this one was a bit off. My initial reaction was that I liked it, but the more you guys are making me think about it, I‘m kind of thinking it‘s got some weirdness to it, especially at the end. 7y
readinginthedark The movie takes most of the humor out, if you want to see what that side would be like. It‘s definitely Shakespeare‘s hodgepodge! 7y
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Riveted_Reader_Melissa
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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Pickpick

I‘m definitely behind on the #ShakespeareReadAlong, but I finally finished this one and now I should be caught up to start the next one at the right time.

Overall I enjoyed this story, in my schooling life we were assigned & read all the tragedies. It‘s wasn‘t until college that I really understood that Shakespeare wrote other things... besides tragedy & sonnets. So I always find myself pleasantly surprised when I reach an actual happy ending.😂

readinginthedark 😆Glad you liked it! My school readings of Shakespeare were so random. But this one has changed definitions so many times, you could have read it and claimed a tragedy! 7y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @readinginthedark Maybe, but I doubt it....there was a happy ending. We read Romeo and Juliet, King Lear, Hamlet, Macbeth, Julius Ceaser....so basically if the teacher said it was that time of year for the Shakespeare play, you knew almost everyone would die by the end. This one had a bunch of people thought died show up really alive...so nice for a change. Then again, I can also say this was true of my other High School required readings... (edited) 7y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa .Mice and Men, The Pearl, Lord of the Flies, Wuthering Heights were all more tragic than anything else. The only one I remember being a “fun” read was The Hobbit. 7y
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readinginthedark I just mean because it was originally published as “The Tragedy of Cymbeline.” But from what I‘ve read, most people seem to attribute that to the fact that a war takes place in the story. 7y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @readinginthedark Maybe from the beginning that he thought his sons gone forever, and later his daughter, plus the war....but considering how oblivious he was to the Queen‘s machinations he made out pretty good by the end. 7y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @readinginthedark I didn‘t even catch that about the title the first time. Thanks for explaining it to me. 7y
readinginthedark Yeah, it‘s a confusing one. Maybe Shakespeare hadn‘t decided what he wanted it to be. 7y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @readinginthedark Maybe it‘s one of those that went through some shifts as they were preformed....maybe some earlier version had a less happy ending as Cymbeline lost all to a scheming queen, and mistaken identities....like having his daughter executed as a Roman, etc. 7y
readinginthedark 🤔Interesting! You might be right! 7y
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Riveted_Reader_Melissa
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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Catching up with my #ShakespeareReadAlong this weekend....it‘s been years since I‘ve read any Shakespeare and I forgot just how dirty his double entendres can be, LOL. Who knows what all I missed in the plays I read as a teen in school....I‘m guessing a lot went over my head then.

Gezemice That‘s quite juicy, all right... 7y
readinginthedark Oh yeah, this is the dirtiest part of the play, too! 7y
InLibrisVeritas I know! I was listening to it at work and immediately started laughing. I had to explain to my co-workers, they didn't get it. *sigh* 7y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @InLibrisVeritas Hahaha! I think listening to it makes it even more obvious. I happened to be listening to this part too when I got to it. 7y
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Austen_Nerd
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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not sure who our #ShakespeareReadAlong posted that the Ischimo reminded them as a wac a mole!! So I could not pass this up!!

readinginthedark 😂❤️ 7y
Jess_Read_This Bahahahaha!!! It was me and this is just perfect!! 7y
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readinginthedark
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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Finally listening to the audio today, which is so good! I‘ll watch the movie tonight to wrap it up, so I can start As You Like It tomorrow!

And the winner (selected by miniwebtool random-name-picker) of the Cymbeline #ShakespeareReadalong prize is @GingerAntics ! Congratulations! My email is below 👇🏻Email me your favorite Shakespeare line or play, your mailing address, and whether you would prefer a bookmark or print!

readinginthedark hew1988 at gmail 7y
CSeydel Congratulations @GingerAntics ! 7y
batsy Congrats @GingerAntics !! (I hope to watch the Cymbeline movie tonight, as well :) 7y
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readinginthedark @batsy Let me know what you think! 7y
GingerAntics @batsy I have it on my watch list, but I‘m nervous to watch it. Let us know what you think. 7y
GingerAntics @readinginthedark how did this even happen? I didn‘t even start off with you guys. 7y
readinginthedark @GingerAntics 😆But you caught up! We had several people join in later in the game, so I tried to include everyone who was consistently posting, tagging the Readathon when they joined, and participating in the discussions. I left a little flexibility because some people were confused about the rules. Congratulations! (edited) 7y
GingerAntics @readinginthedark okay I‘ll go email you then. lol 7y
readinginthedark Hey @GingerAntics , I never saw an email from you. I‘m not sure what happened, and honestly I need to set-up a separate email for Litsy things. But for now, could you give me your email address instead and we can try it that way? 7y
readinginthedark @GingerAntics Okay, I made my special Litsy email: readinginthedark1988@outlook.com Email me there with your favorite Shakespeare quote or play and whether you prefer a print or bookmark! 7y
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CSeydel
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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#ShakespeareReadAlong

Ok, I‘ve cast my version of Cymbeline. What do you think?

Cymbeline: Steve Carell
Imogen: Alison Brie
Posthumus: Michael Cera
Queen: Allison Janney
Iachimo: Ben Affleck
Cloten: Bill Hader
Dr. Cornelius: Martin Freeman
Pisanio: John Krasinski

Featuring Samuel L. Jackson as Jupiter

@readinginthedark @Jess_Read_This @GingerAntics @Lcsmcat @batsy @cocomass

readinginthedark 😂Oh my gosh! This would be the strangest/funniest Cymbeline ever! I love it! We should write these actors! 7y
CSeydel @readinginthedark 😂 the more I thought about it, the more it seemed to fit. Posthumus just seemed like such a dork, but so earnest and intensely emotional. And who better than Ben Affleck to play the sleazy con man, who is deep down good, and comes clean at the end? And Samuel L. Jackson: “why you mortals bothering us about this? Ain‘t none of y‘alls business. The Gods have everything under control.” 7y
readinginthedark Yes! 😆My husband loves Samuel L. Jackson; I‘d probably be able to convince him to watch this version of Cymbeline! 7y
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GingerAntics Love Samuel L Jackson as Jupiter!!! Really not a Ben Affleck fan, but other than that, I‘d watch it. 7y
CSeydel @GingerAntics Ben Affleck is a little too old, too, but I was having trouble coming up with a younger guy who can pull off an ultimately sympathetic sleazeball as well as he can. Maybe Zac Efron? 🤔 7y
GingerAntics @CSeydel I don‘t know much about Zac Efron. Affleck can definitely do sleazeball...or really Ben Affleck as a sleazeball. I‘m never fully convinced by his performances. The Ben part of his always comes through. 7y
Jess_Read_This Your casting is pure gold. I totally want to see this on film now. 7y
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CSeydel
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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Pickpick

#Shakespearereadalong

Overall: this play was great fun and I never would have read it except for this group. Thanks!
#Act5 - maybe it‘s just me but this act feels a little ... choppy? Like WS realized he was over deadline and kinda threw up his hands and said ‘all right let‘s just wrap this up.‘ More 👇

CSeydel I liked the ghosts coming and praying over Posthumus, that was delightfully unexpected. And Jupiter‘s response was delicious ... “whom best I love I cross, to make my gift, the more delayed, delighted.” Oh snap. But then it takes that weird left turn when the doctor comes in and catches everyone up on the Queen‘s evil plot ... and what did she even die of? Desperation? That part was bizarre. 7y
CSeydel And then Cymbeline just kinda takes it in stride. “Oh wow. Did not see that coming. Huh. Well, anyway, off to kill some Roman prisoners.” (For some reason, I picture Steve Carell playing Cymbeline. And Alison Janney as the Queen.) 7y
readinginthedark 😂I love your casting! That would be the funniest version of Cymbeline ever! And yeah, I don‘t know about Act 5. I‘ve read some suspicions that someone else added that heaven/dream scene because there was some funky business publishing it. I think Shakespeare tried to keep things to five acts in all of his plays, so maybe it was a performance timing issue? But things got kind of out of hand because he had extra elements in this play. 🤷🏻‍♀️ 7y
CSeydel It really reads like the finale of an Agatha Christie novel ... all the characters assemble and stand around explaining the tangled plot threads. And I LOL‘d when Posthumus, being the last to recognize Imogen, socked “the page” in grief and indignation when she tried to approach him. @readinginthedark (edited) 7y
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readinginthedark
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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In case any of my #ShakespeareReadalong buddies are interested, here are some literary and historical references Shakespeare might have used when writing Cymbeline!

GingerAntics Holinshed‘s Chronicles again? He seems to use that a lot for several of his plays. I‘ve never been able to find a satisfactory modern edition of it. 7y
readinginthedark @GingerAntics I‘m wondering if maybe it was just the best book on English History at the time? Hollinshed had one about Scotland, too, which Shakespeare used to inspire part of Cymbeline set in Wales, apparently. 7y
GingerAntics It may have been. There were a few other texts he used as well. That‘s just the one I can remember off the top of my head, as I‘ve done a lot of searching for a solid modern edition that isn‘t hundreds of dollars. 7y
GingerAntics @readinginthedark Raphael Holinshed is listed as an “English Chronicler” which is basically a historian that also writes about important current events, so I‘m going to say he was probably the best available at the time. He did England, Scotland and Ireland. Shakespeare used him for his histories, Macbeth, King Lear and Cymbeline. I‘m guessing England was at war with Wales at the time. (My Welsh history is rubbish). 7y
readinginthedark @GingerAntics It‘s better than mine it seems, so no worries! (edited) 7y
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CSeydel
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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#act4 #shakespearereadalong
What can I say? I love that the fight scene takes place offstage. Like ... surprise! Also, anyone else think it‘s a little off-putting how smitten the brothers are with “Fidele”? Like, “oh, if thou were a woman, I‘d woo thee!” “Oh, if Death were at the door, I‘d say ‘take Dad, don‘t take this ... uh, strange boy that I just met yesterday!‘” Totally normal 👌🏼

Jess_Read_This I‘m glad you brought that up. It was incredibly off putting and I was left wondering “why? Just why?” 7y
CSeydel @Jess_Read_This I guess I assumed it was Shakespeare‘s way of emphasizing that despite their “low” upbringing, the “high” blood would come through? That they had this instant connection with Imogen because they were all of royal blood? Divine right of kings, that sort of thing. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ 7y
GingerAntics AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!! 7y
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readinginthedark Yeah, I was wondering about that Death part! Little excessive... Maybe they‘re just tired of looking at each other? 😆 7y
mrsmarch Also, keep in mind that Imogen/Fidele would have been played by a male actor in Shakespeare‘s time? Weeirrddd..... 7y
Lcsmcat 😂 7y
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readinginthedark
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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@batsy This is the Great Courses lecture course I was talking about! I‘m jumping around to the parts where he talks about plays we‘ve read so far, but it‘s very interesting! Cymbeline is discussed in Part 2. #ShakespeareReadalong

batsy Thank you! That looks like something I could get lost in 😍 I'm hoping there might be snippets online... Feel free to report back on any highlights you found interesting, I will nerd out with you 😊 7y
Lcsmcat Cool! 7y
readinginthedark @batsy 👍🏻So far, he‘s primarily made points about the use of poetry in “elevated” situations, such as professions of love, versus the use of prose in regular conversation between characters. He also made some interesting points about Hamlet‘s soliloquies, actions, and moral compass in comparison with Laertes‘s and Ophelia‘s. Hamlet is less active and more contemplative, as well as unwilling to compromise himself by killing his uncle at prayer. 7y
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readinginthedark @Lcsmcat 😊It‘s been a while since I‘ve heard a college lecture; I‘m enjoying it! 7y
batsy Thank you :) Still so much to think about Hamlet. Have you read Crime and Punishment? Reading C&P now is making me think about how Hamletty Raskolnikov is, in a way. There is a great moment where R mentally harangues himself for doing *very bad thing* and he tells himself, "You KNEW you'd be this way after doing it, that's why you shouldn't have done it!" That moment felt so wonderfully Hamlet-like. 7y
CSeydel @batsy Oh that is a very interesting point! I never thought of that! 7y
batsy @CSeydel It is quite fascinating to think about in terms of their interior thought process. 7y
GingerAntics I‘m checking to see if our library has that. 7y
GingerAntics I will nerd out with you too!!! 7y
readinginthedark @batsy I haven‘t! It‘s one of those that I‘ve always meant to but haven‘t yet. Maybe next year—I‘m planning to tackle War and Peace this year. 😅 But that‘s a great point! There‘s so much to process in Hamlet, which is pretty interesting, since there‘s a smaller, more in-depth focus in that play that the others we‘ve read. Shakespeare really dug into the human psyche. 7y
readinginthedark @GingerAntics The more the merrier! That‘s why I love this group so much! 7y
GingerAntics @readinginthedark I do too!!! I‘m so glad I stumbled upon this app and found you guys!!! 7y
readinginthedark @GingerAntics Group hug! 🤗😭😆Me too! 7y
readinginthedark @batsy @GingerAntics @Lcsmcat @CSeydel I finished the Cymbeline portion of these lectures today! One of the more interesting points was about the historical inconsistencies of the play, because Shakespeare was usually very attentive to historical detail when it came to the Caesars‘ Rome, apparently. Examples included the Romans‘ Italian names and actions, Cymbeline‘s representation as a gentleman rather than a warrior... 👇🏻 7y
readinginthedark @batsy @GingerAntics @Lcsmcat @CSeydel ..., and pretty much everything about Posthumus, from his name to how he waved a handkerchief as he sailed away from England. 7y
readinginthedark @batsy @GingerAntics @Lcsmcat @CSeydel He also mentioned that Posthumus disappears from view for a little bit right around the time that he starts acting like a jerk, Cloten-style—and then here comes Cloten, dressed in his clothes! The lecturer said this serves as a reminder of Posthumus‘s change in behavior and connects the two in a sad and ironic way, which seems pretty accurate to me. Not something I‘d thought of before! 7y
batsy Thank you! That's a great point about the Posthumus-Cloten parallel. Never thought of it that way. Also, I wonder what brought about the surge of inaccuracies ... I guess it was written quickly due to a tight deadline and/or a financially sticky situation. 7y
CSeydel @readinginthedark So interesting! Thanks for passing that on. 7y
GingerAntics @readinginthedark Hm. Hadn‘t thought of that before. 7y
Lcsmcat @readinginthedark I hadn‘t thought of the Colten as Posthumus angle that way either. My Mom did a bunch of these Great Courses. I‘m going to see if she has this one I can borrow ! And maybe check iTunes University. They have some Shakespeare courses I‘ve watched before. 7y
readinginthedark @batsy Yeah, I don‘t know about the inaccuracies. Your suggestions make sense, needing something new to perform quickly. Or maybe it was crossing between the two places and keeping up with all of the plot lines? Shakespeare is inaccurate in small points in other plays, it‘s just unusual for the setting‘s time, apparently. 7y
readinginthedark @CSeydel @GingerAntics You‘re welcome! Neither had I! 7y
readinginthedark @Lcsmcat My mom does a lot of them, too, but I think hers are all historical or spiritual. My library has a pretty wide variety, so I think I‘m gonna‘ look into borrowing some others. Let me know if you come across any good ones! 7y
GingerAntics I haven‘t been able to get access to this lecture series, but I have found an Oxford course on Shakespeare that talks about specific plays, and I‘ve downloaded the one for Cymbeline and As You Like It. 7y
GingerAntics @Lcsmcat I went on iTunes U (beware it‘s been integrated with podcasts now) and found all sorts of things. I downloaded an Oxford lecture series. There are tons, though. I ran out of time to look, and knew Oxford would be good so I just downloaded what I could at the time. It will definitely be interesting to see what we can all gather. 7y
Lcsmcat @GingerAntics Excellent ! I‘ll go look. 7y
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CSeydel
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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Where was I? Oh yes, #Act3. Seriously, Pisanio is turning out to be my favorite character. “What shall I need to draw my sword? The paper hath cut her throat already.” Meanwhile, Imogen‘s had enough, and lashes out at All Men Everywhere just because her love is a clod. “All good seeming, by thy revolt, O Husband, shall be thought out on for villainy.” This love story is getting tedious... can we go hang out at the cave? Those guys are great.

CSeydel I mean really — how does she not figure out that Iachimo is behind this? Does she get Italian tourists trying to seduce her that often, that the coincidence doesn‘t stand out in her mind? 🤔 7y
readinginthedark 😂Yes! Iachimo seems like obvious creep material to me, but there‘s also Cloten...so maybe her experience with gentlemen hasn‘t been super favorable in general? And the cave seems like the perfect hangout place! 7y
batsy I felt the same: "Let's go back to the cave guys. They're stand up characters. We'll, except for the surprise beheading, but anyway." I love Pisanio! 7y
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batsy
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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Pickpick

When I started, it felt like I was wading through treacle. But it turned out to be a smooth read from Act 2 onward. I was worried there were too many balls in the air—history, myth, fantasy, romance, tragedy—& it was going to come crashing down. But it came together superbly. I loved so much of the language in the play & found Imogen to be a thoroughly interesting, smart character in the face of yet more entrenched misogyny. #ShakespeareReadAlong

batsy I particularly loved the tone of the scenes set in Wales, in the untamed wilderness. It felt so mythical & "out of place" in what was all the backstabby court intrigue. In that sense, the structure of the play is astonishing because these different environments were sustained in only five acts! I thought Posthumus was undeserving; he should have been kicked off a cliff. And a shout out to the Second Lord who kept insulting Cloten, sotto voce. 7y
Jess_Read_This Yes!!! To everything you said! You summed it up far better than I could. I just marveled how Shakespeare had practically every plot element in fiction plus the kitchen sink thrown into this play and still pulled it off. This was one of my favorites so far. 7y
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batsy @Jess_Read_This Thank you. So glad you enjoyed it, too! It was pretty dazzling, the way he pulled if off 🤩 7y
Sace I love that cover on the left. 7y
Cathythoughts Lovely review! You have a way with words @batsy ❤️❤️❤️ 7y
saresmoore Your reading so far this year is astounding to me! So many buddy reads, classics, SHAKESPEARE...and an excellent review for each—well done, friend! Also, “backstabby court intrigue” is a great turn of phrase. 7y
erzascarletbookgasm Your lovely review makes me want to further discover Shakespeare! I‘ve not touched the Bard since high school (only read two as required reading). For me it‘s not something I can pick up and read easily without annotation. Which of the two editions is a better one for a Shakespeare noob? 7y
batsy @RestlessFickleBookHoarder It's a lovely cover! I unfortunately read the Signet edition on the right and their covers are not very inspired. 7y
batsy @Cathythoughts You're so kind. Thank you so much ❤️❤️❤️ 7y
batsy @saresmoore Thank you Sara ❤️❤️ This year has started off so well reading-wise and it's all thanks to Litsy 😊 7y
batsy @erzascarletbookgasm Thank you 😊 I always feel like a Shakespeare noob so I highly recommend the Signet editions; it's annotated on each page and done very well for easy reference (no flipping pages back and forth)... Each one comes with a thorough intro and lots of critical commentaries at the end. 7y
readinginthedark 👏🏻Brilliant summation! 7y
readinginthedark @erzascarletbookgasm I read the Yale Shakespeare edition, which was also well done and easy to understand. Join us for As You Like It next! 7y
batsy @readinginthedark Thank you! 7y
RohitSawant Another wonderful review! I'm never not blown away by your eloquence. 7y
batsy @rohit-sawant You're too kind!! Thank you so much 😊 7y
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CSeydel
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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A pox upon me! I‘ve been forgetting to make a post for each act. I‘ll try to rectify that now.

#Act2 So, did anyone else want to see Imogen wind up with Pisanio — wise, loyal Pisanio! — instead of that wuss face Posthumus? Compare Imogen‘s reaction to Iachimo‘s lies with Posthumus‘s reaction:

Imo: how dare you say such things, lying scoundrel!
Post: omg women are the font of all evil!

Meanwhile Pisanio is just like ... um, sir, he‘s lying...

Jess_Read_This 😂 I love your summarization of the conversation! 7y
readinginthedark I love your idea so much! I totally thought she and Pisanio should run off together, but I didn‘t think about them hooking up! ❤️ 7y
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readinginthedark
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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“I tell thee, fellow, there are none want eyes to direct them the way I am going but such as wink and will not use them.”
Everything came together for the King and “our heroes” in the end. I had a bit of a love/hate relationship with this play—with most of my love directed toward Imogen; her wild, long-lost brothers; and the Lord whose time was spent mostly making fun of Cloten. Spoiler comment below. What did you think? #ShakespeareReadalong

readinginthedark I think most of my issues with Cymbeline would have been solved if Shakespeare hadn‘t tried to have Posthumus kill Imogen by proxy (or at all). Thoughts? 7y
batsy Definitely agree on the Posthumus scenario. Loathe the guy, though he does have one of my favourite moments in the play (that fantasy/dream scene where the dead quibble with Jupiter). Having read a few Shakespeare plays, that misogyny (centred on women's virtue) seems to have been an all-too healthy trait in society at the time. It is interesting, to that effect, how he creates fearless or smart women characters who bring that misogyny into focus. 7y
Lcsmcat I think it was needed as a plot device. How else could he get Imogen out of the castle and dressed like a boy, and open to drinking the elixir? At least, that his original audience would find plausible. 7y
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GingerAntics It is great fun making fun of Cloten. I loved Imogen and her brothers. I loved that everyone got a happy ending, accept Cymbeline. Did he really deserve one? I feel like none of the other things would have happened if he hadn‘t been a jerk, or would have chosen his new wife more carefully (and then tried to claim it wasn‘t his fault, because she was pretty). 7y
GingerAntics @batsy a lot of the things I‘ve read have said that‘s actually how Shakespeare spoke against misogyny in his day. Every character trait they put on women is only actually displayed by the men in his plays. Also, a bit off topic, but in some places (like where I live), being hyper focused on women‘s virtue (but definitely not men‘s) is still in practice. 7y
readinginthedark @Lcsmcat I was thinking she might have snuck off to try and go to Rome to be with her husband but then couldn‘t get a boat because of the war? That would have been more romantic but less dramatic, I guess. 7y
Lcsmcat @readinginthedark Good point. 7y
readinginthedark @batsy @GingerAntics Cymbeline gets a happy ending as well, though, in the general scheme of things. I like how he keeps getting new information and just rolls with it. And I think you‘re both right about Shakespeare and feminism vs misogyny. I think he has to fit things within the social constructs of the time or it wouldn‘t have made sense to his audience, but he fights against it a little by making his female characters strong. 7y
readinginthedark @GingerAntics You‘re right about women‘s virtue. I mean, it‘s only within the last century that women have had the same divorce rights as men (concerning infidelity), and we‘re still being blamed for rape 75% of the time, so you know... 🤷🏻‍♀️ 7y
GingerAntics @readinginthedark there is definitely this idea drilled into us that we play a role in sexual harassment and rape. It's crazy. We even tend to blame ourselves when some types of things happen. I know, here in Texas, female virginity is a bloody commodity and it‘s all anyone can talk about. “Don‘t marry a girl who‘s not a virgin.” “Don‘t date a girl who‘s not a virgin.” No one cares if a guy isn‘t a virgin. 🙄 7y
readinginthedark @GingerAntics Right! Who are all of these guys having sex with if all of the girls are virgins, I‘d like to know?! 😏 7y
GingerAntics @readinginthedark lol I believe those are called the loose/easy/unfaithful/ungodly girls. 🙄 7y
batsy Good point, @GingerAntics . I live in Malaysia and it's a huge issue here, as well. Lots and lots of pushback from people and women's societies and feminists against these ideas, but the fact that the ideas need to be countered says a lot about what/how much has changed. 7y
GingerAntics @batsy it‘s truly amazing how wide spread these ideas are. Do they do “purity rings” for girls there, too? I‘ve always found it a bit creepy that fathers give their daughters these expensive rings in honour of their virginity. 7y
batsy @GingerAntics No purity rings here as such, but a key struggle here among NGOs & women's organisations is having to end the practice of child marriage as the younger girls are seen as "pure". Truly vile ? 7y
GingerAntics @batsy that really is horrible. That‘s just so wrong. What is with this drive men have for purity? That word probably annoys me the most. 🙄 Ugh. I swear. 7y
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cocomass
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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Mehso-so

Okay I finished this and have MANY thoughts. But first, is there anyone who can recommend a stage version of this to watch on YouTube? I‘d like to watch it while I still have the plot and language in my mind from the #Shakespearereadalong

Tjackson I am behind! I need to finish it this week. 7y
readinginthedark I‘ll have to go back and find the link, but @Lcsmcat recommended one on one of my posts. There‘s a movie version out, as well. I will say: this is one I enjoyed more on stage than reading, I think. There were some lines I loved, but they were more rare than in the other plays we‘ve read so far. 7y
Lcsmcat https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=eGcS6C9_kkY is the one I watched. It‘s Shakespeare in th Park, so there is audience noise and some traffic, but I didn‘t find it too distracting. @Tjackson (edited) 7y
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cocomass @Lcsmcat thank you! 7y
cocomass @readinginthedark I hear you. I really enjoyed the audio version because the acting gave the characters more dimension and humor. I still was scratching my head at some the plot points, but I can imagine loving a live version. I‘ll watch the performance and form a final opinion. 7y
readinginthedark @cocomass Sounds good! I‘m going to watch the movie, listen to an audio, and then listen to a lecture on Shakespeare‘s use of language and rhythm and how it affects the tone of the play! 😂Hopefully it‘s not too much for one week! 7y
batsy @readinginthedark I'm so curious about the lecture on Shakespeare's language; sounds great. Is it online? 7y
readinginthedark @batsy It‘s one of those Great Courses. I found it at my library. I‘ll post a picture! 7y
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readinginthedark
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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“For thee, O Imogen! even for whom my life
Is every breath, a death: and thus, unknown,
Pitied nor hated, to the face of peril
Myself I‘ll dedicate. Let me make men know
More valour in me than my habits show.
Gods! put the strength o‘ the Leonati in me.
To shame the guise o‘ the world, I will begin
The fashion, less without and more within.”

(pictured: Miss Nora Lancaster & Mr. Eric Blind in Cymbeline)

Lcsmcat Nothing like a little self-awareness, even if it is “too late.” 🤷🏻‍♀️ 7y
Velvetfur I love that photo, do you know what era it's from? 1920s perhaps, or earlier...? 7y
Jess_Read_This @Lcsmcat Right?!! I had to brace myself for Imogen taking him back... she‘s too good for him! 7y
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cocomass @jess_read_this @lcsmcat I was hoping she‘d kill him “by accident” so I could be truly happy with the ending. Alas... 7y
readinginthedark @Velvetfur Good question! I had to look it up because I couldn‘t remember. I‘m not exactly sure when the photo was taken, but it was printed on a postcard by Guttenberg that‘s postmarked 1906, so not long before that I imagine. Pretty amazing! 7y
readinginthedark @Lcsmcat @Jess_Read_This @cocomass I find myself torn in situations like this. I kind of wanted something to happen that would tear them apart as well, but at the same time it‘s a bit of a Darcy situation, isn‘t it? Except that Posthumus made pretty speeches in the beginning. But I think Shakespeare is trying to imply that he‘s redeemed himself by fighting so well for his love‘s country when he thought all hope was lost. It also makes me think... 7y
readinginthedark ...of High Society, a classic movie that I watched recently for the first time. I think the moral of that was supposed to be, “People make mistakes; we‘re only human,” but there‘s an expectation of accepting someone you love before being proven wrong if you suspect infidelity...and even of letting it go when they have slept around. In that case, I can understand Posthumus a bit, although I wouldn‘t have said, “Kill the wench!” @Lcsmcat @Jess_Read_This 7y
readinginthedark @cocomass It wouldn‘t let me tag you on the last comment for some reason. 7y
Velvetfur @readinginthedark Oohh how lovely! Actually I did think it might have been earlier than the 20s... It's a great picture anyway 😊 7y
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cocomass
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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Using this flight delay to catch up on Cymbeline Act IV. Reading along while listening to an excellent full cast recording is a great experience. Cloten is SUCH an imbecile that he makes me laugh. The siblings experience the familial equivalent of instalove, and I‘m still not following the Roman plot line 🤷🏽‍♀️

#ShakespeareReadalong

batsy "Familial equivalent of instalove" ??? 7y
cocomass @batsy I mean... where is the lie? 🤷🏽‍♀️ 😂 7y
readinginthedark 😂❤️ 7y
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Lcsmcat
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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InLibrisVeritas
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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Going to attempt to read Cymbeline rather quickly before the #shakespearereadalong group moves on to the next play.

I've had this big book of all of Shakespeare's works for ages and only read a handful of the plays, and now seems like a good time to remedy that.

Riveted_Reader_Melissa I was thinking the same thing! I have a very similar big complete works of, and also thought I should try and read it this weekend and play catch-up! 7y
InLibrisVeritas @Riveted_Reader_Melissa No time like the present! 7y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @InLibrisVeritas My thoughts exactly, but with all my group reads and challenges I better start blocking out reading time on a regular bases to try and keep up! 7y
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InLibrisVeritas @Riveted_Reader_Melissa I understand. I need to do that myself. This will be my fourth group, but this year has been hard on my ability to focus and readalongs have been great at fixing that. 7y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @InLibrisVeritas Exactly! No time like the present, plus there isn‘t any time for get to distracted or unfocused, the next group of books is waiting. 7y
readinginthedark ❤️No worries if you can‘t catch-up! We‘re pretty low key and have a slow schedule, but it‘s so much fun to read through them together! 7y
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Lindy
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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Mehso-so

If not for the full cast audiobook, which includes singing and period music, I doubt I would have made it through this ridiculous play. Maybe more heads could have been chopped? The hints of Snow White and Sleeping Beauty were the best part. Also, when one of my friends heard I was reading this, she said she named her daughter for the Imogen in this play, so that‘s cool. Imogen is definitely the best character, even if she loves an idiot.

Jess_Read_This Hehehe.. I loved how you summed it up. “Imogen is the best character, even if she loves an idiot” Quite right! 😂 7y
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Jess_Read_This
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
This post contains spoilers
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#ShakespeareReadAlong Littens, can you spot the nonexistent plot element in Cymbeline? 😂

The illustrator calls them “ludicrous” plot elements; however, I found them highly entertaining, humorous at times, side eyeing at times, and overall just perfect for this play. It‘s been a fun read so far!

DivaDiane 😂Must be dinosaurs. Not having read Cymbeline 😱I can‘t be sure, but all the rest are plot points that occur in most of his other plays too. They sound “plausible” to me. (edited) 7y
Lcsmcat 🦖🦕 7y
GingerAntics This is Shakespeare!!! Those aren't ludicrous, they're par for the course!!! I've got money on the dinosaur. That's the one thing that never did appear in a Shakespeare play, as I recall (although, admittedly, I haven't read them all. There could be some in there.). lol 7y
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Jess_Read_This @DivaDiane @Lcsmcat ❤️🦖🦕🦖🦕❤️ 7y
Jess_Read_This @GingerAntics Right?! If anything, after seeing all the plot elements laid out, I have even more admiration for the guy to include them in one play and its readability is still stellar! Maybe a dinosaur will appear in Macbeth... 🤔😂 7y
GingerAntics @Jess_Read_This actually that's the play that got me hooked on Shakespeare (it was the first Shakespeare play I ever read). It's got witches and a crazy woman, but no dinosaurs as I recall. Although it's been a while since I read it, so there could be some in there. I may have to go check, now. It's possible. lol 7y
Jess_Read_This @GingerAntics 😂 I haven‘t read it yet! Maybe they make an appearance in Midsummer Night‘s Dream then. 7y
GingerAntics @Jess_Read_This THAT IS VERY LIKELY!!! There are all sorts of creatures in that one. I bet the dinosaurs are in Midsummer Night's Dream. I saw we read that one next. lol 7y
readinginthedark Whew! This is a tough one! 🤔😂 7y
Jess_Read_This @readinginthedark Think long and hard before you answer... 🤣 7y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa I‘m way behind and just starting this one, but having read some other Shakespeare in the past... I‘d have to say Dinosaurs! 😂 7y
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GingerAntics
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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Pickpick

I love Shakespeare, so I'm definitely biased, but I loved this. It's not really a tragedy at all. In a rare turn for Shakespeare, there is a happy ending. I'm also biased because I love British history, so I love any play where Shakespeare took on the history of the British Isles. Big fan of this play, all the way around. #cymbeline #shakespeare #shakespearereadalong #act5 #scene4 #act5scene4 #readthis

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GingerAntics
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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"Stand, whose there" is the very first line of the version of Hamlet in the "bad" quarto. I totally geeked out when I saw it there in the middle of Act 5 Scene 3 of Cymbeline. #nerd #Hamletobsession #Hamlet #cymbeline #shakespeare #act5 #scene3 #act5scene3 #shakespearereadalong

readinginthedark I think the version I read combined elements from all three quartos—it had this line, too! 7y
GingerAntics @readinginthedark It was. The "bad" quarto has "Stand: who is that?" as the first line. The second quarto and first folio have "Who's there?" as the first line. Most modern translations are actually combinations of the three and supposedly wouldn't be unrecognisable to Shakespeare's audiences (so I am told). 7y
GingerAntics I'm not obsessed with Hamlet or anything, though. lol 7y
readinginthedark 😂Hey, Hamlet is a completely justifiable obsession! 7y
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readinginthedark
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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Baking style! I‘m reading snatches of Cymbeline while stirring some coconut custard for a new tart recipe I‘m trying out. 😊 Iachimo finally feels like crap for what he‘s done—took him long enough!
#ShakespeareReadalong

MuddyPuddle Reading Shakespeare for fun is quite impressive. 7y
Jess_Read_This Ohhhh!!! Any pics of the finished product?! Sounds amazing! 7y
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readinginthedark @MuddyPuddle 😆Thanks! I‘m just quirky that way! 7y
readinginthedark @Jess_Read_This I‘ll try to post one tonight! I had to let it chill for several hours. 7y
RadicalReader @readinginthedark I love reading books while multitasking cannot even begin to describe how someone can get so glued in their wonderful work that they‘re so intent on going further and further into the book 7y
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readinginthedark
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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One great thing about driving around the county for work is that I can stop at a park and eat my lunch and read undisturbed, surrounded by natural beauty! Did everyone else know that boys were named Posthumus when their mothers died in childbirth (during the time period of the setting of Cymbeline)? From the phrasing in the first Act, I thought his name came from being born so shortly after his father‘s death, but no.
#ShakespeareReadalong

GingerAntics Wow, I did not know that. That's interesting. 7y
readinginthedark @GingerAntics I know! I actually found that out from listening to that Great Courses lecture. 7y
GingerAntics @readinginthedark I'm going to have to check that out. I feel bad for anyone named Posthumous, though. I constant reminder your mother died giving birth to you. Would the name girls that, too? 7y
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GingerAntics Reread the caption...I wonder if there was a name for girls whose mother's died giving birth to them. 7y
readinginthedark @GingerAntics Agreed! I think it was supposed to be a special honorary thing, or maybe in order to distinguish orphans from worthy families? Who knows. But I don‘t think they did it for girls—just basing that on my two-sentence minimal knowledge on the subject. (edited) 7y
Jess_Read_This I did not know that!! And I‘ve been wondering about his name too. It just seemed like such a sad name and now I know why! 7y
Lcsmcat From genealogy I know that girls were often named Mourning in the Victorian era when their mothers died in childbirth. It always felt cruel to me - like blaming the child or cursing her to be sad all her life. 7y
readinginthedark @Jess_Read_This I had been puzzling over it, too. 7y
readinginthedark @Lcsmcat How fascinating! I‘ve never heard that! 7y
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Dulcinella
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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Pickpick

#Shakespearereadalong #Cymbeline I have struggled with the play until I got the idea to do the audiobook. Then there was no stopping. Really enjoyed it. Are we reading more Shakespeare?

batsy There are so many beautiful lines in this one! 7y
IamIamIam I never thought to do audio Shakespeare either! Great idea!!! 7y
Billypar I saw this performed and it was so much fun- the actors had the audience cracking up. 7y
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Dulcinella @batsy indeed 😍 7y
Dulcinella @IamIamIam Well, it is easier! Might be because I‘m non native english, but essentially they are meant to be performed. 7y
Dulcinella @billypar envying you. Must have been great! 7y
IamIamIam @Dulcinella I can see how being non native makes it more difficult but even as native speakers, we're quite far removed from this form of English, since it's early modern. I applaud you even bothering with it as a non native!!! 😂 Most of the people I know gave up after having it forced on us in high school! 😄 7y
Lcsmcat @Billypar I haven‘t seen it live, but found a full performance on YouTube. It makes a difference seeing it performed! 7y
readinginthedark But of course! We‘ll be reading through all of them bit by bit, and so far we‘ve only done Much Ado About Nothing, Hamlet, and Cymbeline! Stay tuned! @Jess_Read_This will announce the next one soon! 7y
Billypar @Lcsmcat Shakespeare on you tube is a great idea- I'm definitely going to try that. Seeing it really helps interpret the action. 7y
Jess_Read_This Love this post!! I need to try this on audio! 7y
Austen_Nerd I need to try audio!! thank you 7y
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GingerAntics
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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How about no one murders their wife? That would be great, thanks. Divorce is always a better option than murder. #cymbeline #act5 #scene1 #act5scene1 #badadvice #shakespeare #shakespearereadalong #justsayin

Lcsmcat I don‘t think he‘s recommending murder. Think of “must” in this context as modern speakers would say “would.” I think he‘s saying, in the depths of his despair, if everyone acted like he did, so many good women, who are better than their husbands, would be killed. 7y
GingerAntics @Lcsmcat I know. I'm sarcastic by nature. Sorry. 7y
Lcsmcat Sorry to be pedantic. It‘s the teacher in me. 🤦🏻‍♀️ 7y
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GingerAntics @Lcsmcat I totally understand. I'm in the same position. We get so used to explaining things that we just do it by nature. I'm in the same boat. lol (although at the moment I'm sick of repeating myself a thousand times and still getting no response... so I may have stopped explaining things for the moment) 7y
readinginthedark 😂Whaaaaat? A suggestion that improves something? Why would we do that?! 7y
GingerAntics @readinginthedark no idea. Improvements are a total waste of time. lol 7y
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GingerAntics
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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So much torture in #cymbeline #act4. Officially all caught up, and ready to start on act 5 today. Seems like Cymbeline finally understands just how much he's losing by being a jerk and forcing his daughter and step son together...or he's just pouting that he still hasn't gotten his way. It's always a bit hard to tell with kings. #shakespeare #shakespearereadalong #act4scene3

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GingerAntics
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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Cymbeline was first preformed in 1611, 15 years after the death of Shakespeare's son, Hamnet (Hamlet was written just 3 years after his son's death). It seems that after losing his 11 year old son, Shakespeare began to have a [possibly not so] mild obsession with suicide. I wonder if this is a reflection of his personal loss and an internal battle with himself. #cymbeline #shakespeare #shakespearereadalong #act3 #act3scene4

readinginthedark Hm...that‘s an interesting idea. I‘m not sure how he felt since he spent so little time with his family, but maybe he regretted not being with his son more? 7y
GingerAntics @readinginthedark from what I've read he was deeply impacted by the loss of his only son and heir. Hamlet is generally very closely linked to that time frame (for obvious reasons), and Hamlet's curiosity about suicide is attributed to Shakespeare's loss. Even Hamlet's name is sometimes seen as a tie to his son. 7y
readinginthedark Curious! I‘ll have to read more about this! 7y
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readinginthedark
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
This post contains spoilers
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Act IV—From Cloten‘s wanderings through the mountains to find Imogen to the beginning of war between the Britons and the Romans. Even though (knowing Shakespeare‘s love for historical embellishment) this probably isn‘t historically accurate, it‘s making me want to read more about early British history. And I just had to chuckle when Imogen thought she found Posthumus‘s body. I feel bad for her...but still! #ShakespeareReadalong #hostpost

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readinginthedark
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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Dinner and a book! Between some family demands and trying to complete a couple of ARCs on time, I fell behind with this one! But I‘m enjoying everyone‘s posts, and I‘ll try to finish and post some more today and tomorrow. I love this burial passage in Act IV! Does anyone know if Shakespeare referenced other works with some of these phrases or if it was all original? #ShakespeareReadalong #hostpost

batsy I love this song/poem. From what I understand in Marjorie Garber's essay, this was wholly original (and "golden lad" and "chimney-sweeper" being folk terms for dandelions, so she cites this as an example of his complex "flower passages" and "nature fables", merging nature with the human world). 7y
readinginthedark @batsy Amazing! I‘m thinking of getting a print of this and hanging it in my library. That may seem morbid, but it‘s so beautiful! 7y
batsy Not morbid at all! It really is beautiful. 7y
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Lindy
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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Yikes! Apparently it was his own fault to have been beheaded, for his uncivil language. #shakespearereadalong

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Lindy
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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Oh, wicked queen! #shakespearereadalong

LeahBergen 😠😠 7y
Lcsmcat Act V, though. 😏 The Bard doesn‘t let her get away with it. 7y
Lindy @Lcsmcat @LeahBergen Yes, she gets her comeuppance. 7y
LeahBergen @Lcsmcat @Lindy Oh, good! 👍🏻 7y
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Lindy
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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At the end of the full cast recording of this play, there is a list of the many singers and musicians who took part in the production. Their instruments include: recorders, violins, violas, cellos, double base, percussion and sackbuts. I immediately had to google an image of a sackbut. (See above.) #shakespearereadalong

Lcsmcat Yep. My husband is a professional trombonist and he made a sackbutt out of an old student trombone for playing renaissance music. 7y
Lindy @Lcsmcat Cool! 7y
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Lcsmcat
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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Imogen‘s and Posthumous‘ #elopement set off the chain of events that is the play, #Cymbeline. #150PnPCoverParty #shakespearereadalong @CrowCAH @LeahBergen @readinginthedark @Jess_Read_This

Jess_Read_This And quite a chain of events it is!! 7y
merelybookish I was thinking this too! 7y
everfree7 My college students are reading The Merchant of Venice right now. It's a new Shakespeare play for all of them so it's exciting for me! 7y
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Lcsmcat @everfree7 That is exciting, to introduce a great work to a new group of readers! 7y
LeahBergen Good one! 👏🏻 7y
everfree7 Agreed. They voted and 14 out of 19 students wanted me to add a Shakespeare play to the schedule. Of course, I told them it would not be one of the ones they all read in high school! 7y
readinginthedark Nice choice! 7y
readinginthedark @everfree7 I love that your students were so eager to read Shakespeare! ❤️ 7y
everfree7 I did not expect that! But many of them may have said yes thinking it would be one they already read in high school 😂 7y
readinginthedark @everfree7 Good point! “Because didn‘t he only write like, two plays?” 😂 7y
CrowCAH Haven‘t read this Shakespeare. 7y
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Lcsmcat
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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readinginthedark ❤️There are some interesting lines about their princely nature! Good choice! 7y
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GingerAntics
Cymbeline | William Shakespeare
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You can‘t lose dignity you never had to begin with. Cloten is such an idiot. #Cymbeline #Shakespeare #act2 #shakespearereadalong

I‘ve actually managed to make it through all of act 2 today. I can start in on act 3 tomorrow. #catchingup

CSeydel Glad it‘s not just me ... I‘m hoping to get through Act 3 today! 7y
readinginthedark Yes, he‘s the worst! 7y
GingerAntics @CSeydel oh you‘re not either? I‘m glad I‘m not the only one, too!!! Act 3 has a few more scenes in it, but I think I can probably read it by tomorrow at the latest. Fingers crossed. I‘m trying to take breaks between bouts of reading so I don‘t hit a motivational brick wall. 7y
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GingerAntics @readinginthedark I may be slightly evil, but I kind of like when characters don‘t notice they‘ve just been insulted. It makes it funny. lol 7y
readinginthedark Oh, definitely! It‘s a little gift from the playwright! 7y
GingerAntics @readinginthedark it really is...the gift that just keeps on giving. lol 7y
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