He said or she said:
“What’s past is prologue.”
- Antonio in THE MERCHANT OF VENICE.
- Antonio in THE TEMPEST.
- Titania in A MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM.
Quiz #61 answer: 1
He said or she said:
“What’s past is prologue.”
Quiz #61 answer: 1
He said or she said:
“We know what we are, but know not what we may be.”
Quiz #60 answer: 3
He said or she said:
“That but this blow might be the be-all and the end-all.”
Quiz #59 answer: 2
COMING SOON
The Corisco Conspiracy, Raphael Sóne’s novel, an early draft of which was blogged on this site in 2018, is now being prepared for publication.
Set for the most part in Elizabethan and Jacobean England, The Corisco Conspiracy is a historical novel of diaspora Africa narrated by none other than the Bard of Avon. The bard’s best friend and ghostwriter is an African philologist. His second wife, the hitherto unidentified Dark Lady of the Sonnets, is a native of Corisco (an island in present-day Equatorial Guinea). And two of the novel’s other principal characters are a London couple of Malian descent.
HISTORICAL NOTE
Although they never formally declared war against each other, England and Spain were in conflict for more than half of the forty-something years that Elizabeth the First sat uneasily on the English throne and Philip the Second menacingly wielded the Spanish sceptre. For twenty of those years, from 1585 to 1605, the man whose name would later become a synonym for the word “English” was employed by Spain as a Roman Catholic counter intelligence operative. The Corisco Conspiracy is his gripping first-hand account (in crystal clear prose) of the events which led up to the Gunpowder Plot, of which he was the mastermind.
SYNOPSIS
April 1585: recusant Jesuit messenger William Shakespeare arrives in Rome expecting to meet his best friend, a budding playwright with whom he wishes to enter into a partnership in the entertainment industry. But his friend left Rome about one month earlier to go and complete a doctorate in philology at the University of Salamanca. Before he decides whether to proceed to Salamanca or return to London, another messenger, a certain Guy Fawkes, brings him new directives from his employer: the Bishop of Winchester, a crypto-Catholic prelate of the Church of England. As instructed by His Excellency, William travels to the West African island city of Corisco in the Kingdom of Malabo. There he meets the woman and some of the men with whom, after suffering religious discrimination for over two decades, he contrives the most diabolical assassination plot in British history.
THE NARRATOR
Musketman Shakespeare is the darling of social media. He is well-liked on Facebook. Set up in 2017, his blog was visited over 25,000 times within the first three years of its being established. As a “Jesuit messenger at Roman Catholic Church”, he has thousands of connections on LinkedIn – many prominent religious leaders among them. And as the “Mastermind of the Gunpowder Plot” he is followed on Twitter by swarms of admirers, not a few of whom work for the Vatican.
THE AUTHOR
Raphael Sóne is a translator and bardolater. The Corisco Conspiracy is his first novel. It was originally entitled The War Memoirs of William Shakespeare. Mr. Sóne lives in Cameroon, Canada, Colombia and Mexico. He can be reached at www.MusketmanShakespeare.blog
He sang or she sang:
“Sigh no more, ladies, sigh no more!”
Quiz #58 answer: 1
He said or she said:
“Weigh the enemy more mighty than he seems.”
Quiz #57 answer: 3
He said or she said:
“I am not in the giving vein today.”
Quiz #56 answer: 2
He said or she said:
“Come not within the measure of my wrath.”
Quiz #55 answer: 1
He said or she said:
“Out, damned spot! out, I say!”
Quiz #54 answer: 3
He said or she said:
“Every one can master a grief but he that has it.”
Quiz #53 answer: 2