Shakespeare stories in 10 words or less

The Thinker, Shakespeare style

I love Twitter. I’ve made several friends and important contacts while being on Twitter. I especial love playing hashtag games. My favorite is a weekly game called Shakespeare Sunday. Each Sunday a group of Shakespeare geeks who go by the Twitter handle @Hollow Crown Fans host a game devoted to a particular Shakespeare theme. It’s up to the players to come up with Shakespeare quotes using 140 characters or less, making sure there is room to tag the post #ShakespeareSunday.

One of the things I’ve noticed while participating in the game over the last year is that the quotes which receives the most retweets are brief and to the point. My shortest quote, “Exist pursued by a bear” garnered me 52 retweets in 15 minutes. I am not sure what this says about our attention span but it says a lot about Shakespeare. He had the ability to tell us immense stories using few words. Some of his best quotes are one-liners, yet they speak volumes

I had a chat with someone today on Twitter about Shakespeare’s ability to tell us stories using few words.  We agreed that one of my Tweets used said so much in just 10 words.  It moved a lot of people to retweet and comment on it. This became my personal challenge for the day. Could I find 10 quotes under 10 words that told a story or moved us to think beyond the brief statement? The ones I picked had to tell a larger story than the words being offered. If not a story, then they had to give us pause and reflect on the implications of the words. It wasn’t enough just to find a brief quote, there had to be something beyond them.

I give you 10 short stories from Shakespeare, using 10 words or less

 

The day frowns more and more. A Winter’s Tale

She gave me for my pains a world of sighs. Othello

The course of true love never did run smooth. Midsummer’s Night Dream

Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown. Henry IV

She is so self-endeared. Much Ado about Nothing

I am a man more sinned against than sinning. King Lear

An honest tale speeds best being plainly told. Richard III

I wasted time, and now doth time waste me. Richard II

In a false quarrel there is no true valor. Much ado about nothing

The rest is silence. Hamlet

A visual tour of the Greatest Show On Earth

On this day in 1810, Phineas Taylor Barnum was born. We now know him as P.T. Barnum. Let’s celebrate by revisiting an older blog that talks about his legacy. I give you

A visual tour of the Greatest Show on Earth!

P.T. Barnum was a well-known showman recognized for his engaging hoaxes. He was so successful at fooling the masses he decided to showcase his collection in a large museum.

In 1841 Barnum, purchased Scudder’s American Museum and renamed the building “Barnum’s American Museum.” In 1842, Barnum’s museum became the talk of the town with exhibits, such as “General Tom Thumb” and the Fiji Mermaid, which displayed the mummified body of something that resembled a grossly deformed mermaid or half mammal-half fish creation. The famous Siamese twins Chang and Eng were introduced to the world. Many of Barnum’s “freaks” would become circus acts. General Tom Thumb would become a favorite Ring Master.  As much as we might shutter to think of housing disabled people and those who look different, this was honest work for them. Many remained loyal to Barnum as he offered them shelter, fame and money.

Unfortunately,  on July 14, 1865 Barnum’s museum caught on fire and suffered irreparable damage. http://www.nytimes.com/1865/07/14/news/disastrous-fire-total-destruction-barnum-s-american-museum-nine-other-buildings.html

Not one to let disaster stand in the way of success, Barnum decided to take his museum on the road. With his famous name and financial backing, the “P.T Barnum’s Grand Traveling Museum, Menagerie, Caravan & Hippodrome” was born. His closest competition at the time, James Bailey, would later become an ally.

In 1872, Barnum would coin the phrase, “The Greatest Show on Earth,” as his traveling circus of freaks toured the world, undergoing a series of name changes and billings in the process.

In 1881 Barnum, who was losing money, joined forces with James Bailey and James L. Hutchinson. The original name, “P.T. Barnum’s Greatest Show On Earth, And The Great London Circus, Sanger’s Royal British Menagerie and The Grand International Allied Shows United” was shortened to “Barnum & London Circus”.

A series of splits ensued resulting in several more name changes. The circus became known as “Barnum & Bailey Greatest Show on Earth” then “Barnum & Bailey Circus”. The last name change came about when professional acts and animal tricks started to replace the aging “freaks”.

When P.T. Barnum passed away in 1891, Bailey purchased the circus from his widow. He successfully toured the eastern part of the United States until he transported the circus to Europe where in 1897 he began touring the continent.

When Bailey returned to the U.S. in 1902 to find that Ringling Brothers had established a reputation in the east. The new rivalry forced Bailey to tour the Rockies for the first time during 1905. The next year, Bailey passed away and the Barnum’s much-loved circus was sold to Ringling Brothers in 1907 for the sum of $400,000.

Not much is known about the first professional acts, it would take the Ringling Brothers to legitimize the circus with ads talking about the performers as real people, not oddities. But we can imagine the mystery and fantasy of the Greatest Show on Earth by the colorful posters history has left us. So grab your peanuts and come with me on a visual tour of the circus!

Click on any picture for a better view.

BarnumBailey

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