Merry Wives of Windsor - FULL
Audio Book - by
William Shakespeare
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The Merry Wives of Windsor is a comedy by William Shakespeare, first published in
1602, though believed to have been written prior to 1597. It features the fat knight
Sir John Falstaff. Though nominally set in the reign of
Henry IV, the play makes no pretence to exist outside contemporary
Elizabethan era English middle class life. It has been adapted for the opera on several occasions.
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The play's date of composition is unknown; it was registered for publication in 1602, but was probably several years old by that date. Textual allusions to the
Order of the Garter at
Windsor Castle (
5.5. 69--72) suggest that the play may have been intended for performance in April 1597, prior to the installation at
Windsor in May of the Knights-Elect of that order; if so, it was probably performed when
Elizabeth I attended Garter
Feast on 23 April.
Katherine Duncan-Jones points out that this was the year
Lord Hunsdon, the
Lord Chamberlain, was admitted to the
Order and that, as a patron of
Shakespeare's playing company
The Lord Chamberlain's Men he could have commissioned the play for performance that evening. This is not incompatible with the popular notion that
Elizabeth herself had wished to see "
Falstaff in love";
Hunsdon was well placed to pass on the queen's wishes to his players.[2] A more direct explanation comes from the epilogue to
Henry IV, Part 2, which promises to "continue the story, with Sir
John in it". Sir John does not appear in
Henry V, so
Merry Wives was written to make good on the pledge.[3]
The Garter theory is only speculation, but it is corroborated by a story first recorded by
John Dennis in 1702 and
Nicholas Rowe in 1709: that
Shakespeare was commanded to write the play by
Queen Elizabeth, who wanted to see "Falstaff in love". However, that such a story was first recorded one hundred years later -- in the same year in which
Dennis had made an
adaptation of Merry Wives -- makes it unreliable.
Support for the Garter theory is divided. If it is correct, it would mean that Shakespeare wrote The Merry Wives of Windsor between
Henry IV part 1 and part 2. Critics have trouble believing this because of all the inconsistencies that appear between the
Henry plays and Merry Wives. For example, there are no references to any of the major events from Falstaff's fifteenth-century exploits from the history plays, such as the rebellion (Henry IV part 1 & 2), in Merry Wives.
18 January 1602 was the date the play was entered into the
Register of the
Stationers Company. The first quarto was published later that year, in an inferior text, by bookseller
Arthur Johnson. It was published in a second quarto in 1619, as part of
William Jaggard's
False Folio; the superior
First Folio text followed in 1623.
The title page of Q1 states that the play was acted by the
Lord Chamberlain's Men, "Both before
Her Majesty, and elsewhere." The earliest known performance occurred on
4 November 1604, at
Whitehall Palace. The play is also known to have been performed on
15 November 1638, at the
Cockpit in Court.
The play alludes to a
German duke, who is generally thought to be
Frederick I, Duke of Württemberg, who had visited
England in 1592 and was elected to the Order of the Garter in 1597 (and who was eventually only installed in
Stuttgart on
6 November 1603).[2]
There is an indication that Falstaff in Merry Wives was originally called
Sir John Oldcastle, as was true of Falstaff in the Henry IV plays. See: Sir John Oldcastle and
Sir John Fastolf.
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SYNOPSIS
The play is nominally set circa 1400, during the same period as the Henry IV plays featuring Falstaff, but there is only one brief reference to this period, a line in which the character
Fenton is said to have been one of
Prince Hal's rowdy friends (he "kept company with the wild prince and Poins"). In all other respects the play implies a contemporary setting of the Elizabethan era, circa 1600.
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- published: 14 Feb 2013
- views: 4749