Nobody and Somebody
Auteur : Auteur inconnu
Date de publication : 2023-05-02
Ăditeur : Anaphora Literary Press
Nombre de pages : 136
Résumé du livre
A comedy that juxtaposes fame with anonymity, and tyrannical abuse with fair governance. Â
The rapid succession of monarchs across Nobody and Somebody satirizes the standard plots of âShakespeareanâ histories that end with the overthrow or death of the preceding tyrannical monarch, and suggest hope that the next monarch will be better, before this hope is dispelled in the next tragic history, as is the case with the chronological series of Edward III, Richard II, and 1 Henry IV. Nobody is set in 85-60 BC, or just before the Roman invasion of the British Isles. The plot opens with two Court advisors, Cornwall and Marcian, scheming to overthrow their corrupt King Archigallo who unfairly confiscates land to grant it to Lord Sycophant and names a common Wench as his Queen. The coup dâĂ©tat succeeds, and Elidure accepts the crown when the advisors explain he is the only rational choice. A while into his reign, Elidure finds Archigallo in exile in a forest, and insists that Archigallo retakes the throne from him. While Archigalloâs second term is less tyrannical it ends shortly thereafter due to his natural death, upon which the throne passes back to Elidure. Without a reprise in the events, Elidureâs two younger brothers then wage war against Elidure and overthrow him. And then these brothers cannot agree on who between them should have power over the other, and so they wage war against each other and both die, leaving Elidure to again reclaim the throne. The radical moral story against tyranny in this central plot is dampened by the constant interruptions of a rival plotline about Nobody and Somebody. Nob
Exordium
Plot and Staging
Primary Sources
âThe Seventh Chapterâ About Elidure from the âRaphael Holinshedâ-bylined and Gabriel Harvey and Richard Verstegan-Ghostwritten The Chronicles of England, Scotland, and Ireland
âThe Well-spoken Nobodyâ
Alexander Smithâs âNoteâ from the 1877 Old-Spelling Glasgow Edition
Text
Terms, References, Questions, Exercises