"The Upstart Crow

The term upstart crow was used by Robert greene in 1592,in a carping book called A Groatsworth of wit. "an upstart crow....in his on conciet the only shakescene in a country. Because in the early 1595 William shakespeare had just began to make make a name for himself as a playwright with works such as Henry vi and comedy of errors.in 1584 Shakespeare left his native town. The most popular explanation after his death, is that he was convicted of poaching on the estate of a local magnate, sir Thomas lucy, and that he fled to escape the consequence. Then until 1592,when he reappears as a rising actor. During this period he performed various menial offices, including that of holding horses at the stage door. At the same time as a Glover's son and a grammar -school boy from Stratford, Become as world famous writer. His plays seem to tell us that. Here is a great writer who is happily steeped in low culture and the english country side as much as court politics and affairs to state.

Back in 2012,The British library displayed a rare book that attracted as much media attention as a Gutenberg bible. It was mass-produced edition of a text once owned by Nelson -Mandela. Mandela had kept this volume by his beside for more than 20 years, and it had sustained him through his darkest hours on Robbin island. Some times he had read aloud from it to his cellmates. Mandela son of a xhosa chief, was born and grew up in transkei, 6000 miles from Britain.But speaking about the collected works of william shakespeare. He once said, ``Shakespeare always seems to have something to say us. His work is a mirror on which we can reflect themes of love and hate, war and peace, freedom and tyranny, but the man himself is mysterious.After 400 years, such magical invisibility makes him more than ever god like. Jhon dryden said : that he was the man who of all modern and perhaps ancient poets, had the largest and most comprehensive soul. These notes are collected from the book of Edward Albert named History of English literature.