Taming of the Shrew, The
The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature
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2003
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© The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature 2003, originally published by Oxford University Press 2003. (Hide copyright information)
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Taming of the Shrew, The, a comedy by
Shakespeare, first printed in the
folio of 1623, probably written
c.1592, or earlier, and based in part on the
Supposes adapted by G.
Gascoigne from
Ariosto.
The play begins with an induction in which Christopher Sly, a drunken Warwickshire tinker, picked up by a lord and his huntsmen on a heath, is brought to the castle, sumptuously treated, and in spite of his protestations is assured that he is a lord who has been out of his mind. He is set down to watch the play that follows, performed solely for his benefit by strolling players.
Baptista Minola of Padua has two daughters, Katherina the Shrew, who is the elder of the two, and Bianca, who has many suitors but who may not marry until a husband has been found for Katherina. Petruchio, a gentleman from Verona, undertakes to woo the shrew to gain her dowry and to help his friend Hortensio win Bianca. To tame her he pretends to find her rude behaviour courteous and gentle and humiliates her by being late for their wedding and appearing badly dressed. He takes her off to his country house and, under the pretext that nothing there is good enough for her, prevents her from eating or sleeping. By the time they return to Baptista's house, Katherina has been successfully tamed, and Lucentio, a Pisan, has won Bianca by disguising himself as her schoolmaster, while the disappointed Hortensio has to console himself with marriage to a rich widow. At the feast which follows the three bridegrooms wager on whose wife is the most docile and submissive. Katherina argues that ‘Thy husband is thy lord, thy life, thy keeper, | Thy head, thy sovereign’ and Petruchio wins the bet.
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Newspaper article from: The Independent on Sunday; 5/23/2004; ; 700+ words
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A jungle out there
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 11/10/2007; 700+ words
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DEAR RANGER RICK.
Magazine article from: Ranger Rick; 4/1/1999; 700+ words
; ...plants. Answer to February's "Who Am I?" The bird in the photograph is a shoebill--also called a shoebill stork or a whale-headed stork. Shoebills walk slowly through African marshes, looking for fish, frogs, or young turtles...
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Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 11/27/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...panicked and kept it in a drum, unsure of what to do with it. Birds have also been saved. The centre is home to a shoebill stork, a 5ft tall, grey-feathered bird of which there are only 350 left in the world. It was found in the boot of a...
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Travel: Get Set, Go! Eco-tours
Newspaper article from: The Sunday Telegraph London; 5/2/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...can track chimpanzees (Semliki is sponsoring a long-term chimp study). You can help protect a colony of rare shoebill stork in a section of Lake Albert, also in Uganda (from pounds 1,650 for 10 days including flight). Bookings through...
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From concrete jungle to wild Africa
Newspaper article from: New Straits Times; 12/13/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...western province to catch one of the world's greatest wildebeest migrations. "Plus Bangweulu Wetlands - to see the shoebill stork, a rare and weird-looking bird that has a bill shaped like a clog," she added. "Three months would have been...
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WATERBIRDS DECLINE.(News)
Newspaper article from: The Cincinnati Post (Cincinnati, OH); 1/23/2007; 324 words
; ...fallen in the past five years, while 34 percent were stable, and 17 percent rising. Altogether, 12 families of birds have half or more of their global populations showing a decreasing trend, including storks, shoebills and plovers.
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Survey: Waterbird Species Are in Decline
News Wire article from: AP Online; 1/23/2007; 700+ words
; ...Altogether, 12 families of birds have half or more of their global populations showing a decreasing trend, including storks, shoebills and plovers. The numbers are slightly worse than 2002 - when the last study was conducted. At that time, 41 percent...
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Cities drowning out waterbirds.(Life)
Newspaper article from: Cape Argus (South Africa); 1/24/2007; 640 words
; ...Altogether, 12 families of birds have half or more of their global populations showing a decreasing trend, including storks, shoebills and plovers. The worst decreases occurred in Asia, where 62% of the waterbird populations had declined or become...
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Waterbird population in decline, study finds: Researchers blame, global warming, economic development for downturn
Newspaper article from: Charleston Daily Mail; 1/23/2007; ; 583 words
; ...Altogether, 12 families of birds have half or more of their global populations showing a decreasing trend, including storks, shoebills and plovers. The numbers are slightly worse than 2002 - when the last study was conducted. At that time, 41 percent...
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shoebill stork
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
shoebill stork common name for a large...solitary, silent bird, the shoebill stork is native to the marshy...In several respects, shoebills are similar to herons...A ground nester, the shoebill deposits its one or two...
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shoebill
Book article from: The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English
shoe·bill / ˈ sh oōˌbil / • n. an African stork ( Balaeniceps rex , the only member of the family Balaenicipitidae) with gray plumage and a very large bill shaped like a wooden shoe.
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