Three Lancashire Plays: The Game; The Northerners; Zack

Three Lancashire Plays: The Game; The Northerners; Zack
Author: Harold Brighouse
Publisher: DigiCat
Total Pages: 232
Release: 2022-08-01
Genre: Drama
ISBN:

DigiCat Publishing presents to you this special edition of "Three Lancashire Plays: The Game; The Northerners; Zack" by Harold Brighouse. DigiCat Publishing considers every written word to be a legacy of humankind. Every DigiCat book has been carefully reproduced for republishing in a new modern format. The books are available in print, as well as ebooks. DigiCat hopes you will treat this work with the acknowledgment and passion it deserves as a classic of world literature.

Three Late Medieval Morality Plays: Everyman, Mankind and Mundus et Infans

Three Late Medieval Morality Plays: Everyman, Mankind and Mundus et Infans
Author: G.A. Lester
Publisher: A&C Black
Total Pages: 190
Release: 2014-05-29
Genre: Drama
ISBN: 1408144085

"Take example, all ye that this do hear or see..." The Morality Play was popular in England between 1400 and 1600. It offers moral instruction and spiritual teaching with personal abstractions representing good and evil. Surviving plays from that period number about sixty and the three in this edition were among the first ten. Mankind is a plain, honest farming man who struggles against worldly and spiritual temptation. The bawdy humour and violent action in the play serve to make the moral point and instruct by example. Everyman portrays a man's struggles in the face of death to raise himself to a state of grace so that he may experience everlasting life. It is exceptional among the Moralities for this narrow focus on the last phase of life, and conveys its message with awe-inspiring seriousness. Mundus et Infans is more typical of the Morality genre. It shows an arrogant, bullying protagonist led astray by a single evildoer into a life of debauchery, before the inevitable conversion to virtue. In showing the whole of man's life it is the antithesis of Everyman, the action of which seems to take place in a single day.

Three Jacobean Witchcraft Plays

Three Jacobean Witchcraft Plays
Author: Peter Corbin
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Total Pages: 276
Release: 1986
Genre: Drama
ISBN: 9780719019531

For Jacobean society, witchcraft was a potent and very real force, an area of sharp controversy in which King James I himself participated and a phenomenon that attracted many dramatists and writers. The three plays in this book - Sophonisba, The Witch and The Witch of Edmonton - reflect the variety of belief in witches and practice of witchcraft in the Jacobean period. Jacobean understanding of witchcraft is illuminated by the close study of these contrasting texts in relation to each other and to other contemporary works: The Masque of Queenes; Dr Faustus; Macbeth and The Tempest. The introduction and detailed commentaries explore the considerable theatrical potential of plays which, with the exception of The Witch of Edmonton, have been hitherto lost to the dramatic repertory.

The Freeman

The Freeman
Author: Francis Neilson
Publisher:
Total Pages: 654
Release: 1920
Genre: History, Modern
ISBN:

Brief Candles: McMaster, Hyland and Other One-Match Wonders

Brief Candles: McMaster, Hyland and Other One-Match Wonders
Author: Keith Walmsley
Publisher: Association of Cricket Statisticians and Historians
Total Pages: 137
Release: 2012-10-01
Genre: Sports & Recreation
ISBN: 1908165146

Playing in a first-class match gives a cricketer a certain cachet. For ever after, opponents know that such-and-such played ‘big cricket’ and will expect him to perform accordingly. Even when his achievements lie elsewhere, biographers and obituarists will sagely note his appearances, however limited, and readers will infer that the subject has a special talent for the game. Nine thousand cricketers have played in just one first-class match, but for some their one appearance was more memorable than for others, for good reasons or otherwise. In 1924, Fred Hyland spent less than ten minutes on the field of play before rain washed out the game. Poor Josiah Coulthurst didn’t even step onto the playing area in a damp Lancashire contest in 1919. Emile McMaster’s only match, in South Africa in 1889, was later awarded Test match status. Bob Richards, playing for Essex at Leyton in 1970, didn’t learn till afterwards that his solitary appearance was a first-class game. Nobody can now be sure who was the Wilkinson who played a match at Oxford in 1939. Some one-match wonders have achieved much in their brief days in front of the cricket-watching public, centuries even and ‘eight-fors’: others have gone on to exceptional achievements in fields sporting, political and military. Keith Walmsley reports on the ‘struts’ and ‘frets’ of some players who appeared just once on the first-class ‘stage’ and then were ‘heard no more’.