
SHAKESPEARE - A LECTURE
By Robert G. Ingersoll - Shakespeare.—An intellectual ocean, whose waves touched all the shores of thought.
SHAKESPEARE.
I.
II.
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IV.
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VI.
VII.
A sweeping, lyrical address invites listeners into the mind of a speaker who treats Shakespeare as an ocean of thought whose waves have touched every shore of human imagination. The tone is reverent yet conversational, drawing you into a meditation on why one man’s words still shape the way we speak, love, and argue.
The lecture traces Shakespeare’s modest beginnings in a quiet Avon village, pointing out how neither royal blood nor formal schooling can explain his extraordinary gift. It challenges the myths that cling to his name, exploring how poverty, ordinary parents, and the cultural currents of his time forged a talent that would outshine any courtly patronage. Along the way, the speaker reflects on the broader relationship between genius, education, and society, offering insights that feel as fresh today as they were when first spoken.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (77K characters)
Release date
2011-11-22
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1833–1899
A dazzling 19th-century speaker known as “the Great Agnostic,” he packed lecture halls with sharp wit, fearless criticism of orthodox religion, and a deep faith in reason and human dignity. Lawyer, Civil War veteran, and political voice all at once, he became one of the most famous public lecturers of his age.
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