Stratford-Upon-Avoh Festival

Stratford-Upon-Avoh Festival

A H A N D BOO K TO THE STRATFO RD - U PON - AVON FESTIVAL A Handb o o k to the St rat fo rd- u p o n- A V O H Fe st iv al WITH ART I C LE S BY N R . B N O F . E S ARTHUR HUTCHINSO N N R EG I A L D R . B UC K L EY CECI L SH RP J. A A ND [ LL USTRA TI ONS P UBLI SHED UNDER TH E A USPICES A ND WITH THE SPECIAL SANCTION OF TH E SHAKESPEARE M EMORIAL COUNCI L LONDON NY L GEO RGE ALLEN COM PA , T D. 44 45 RATH B ONE P LA CE I 9 1 3 [All rig hts reserved] P rinted b y A L L A NT Y NE A NSON ér' B , H Co . A t the Ballant ne P ress y , Edinb urg h P R E F A IC E “ T H E Shakespeare Revival , published two years ago , has familiarised many with the ideas inseparable from any national dramatic Festival . But in that book one necessarily Opened up vistas of future development beyond the requirements of those who desire a Hand a book rather than Herald of the Future . For them an abridgment and revision are effected here . Also there are considerable additions , and Mr . Cecil J . Sharp contributes a chapter explaining the Vacation School of Folk Song o f and Dance , which he became Director since the previous volume was issued . The present volume is intended at once to supplement and no t condense , to supersede , the library edition . B R . R . 4 3 4 4 6 8 C O N T E N T S TH E FESTIVAL I DEA B F R B E S y . N ON . THE SHAKESPEARE M EM ORIAL THEATRE AT STRAT FORD - UPON-AVON I A . R ECORD OF I TS WORK T H E I I . FURTHER DEVEL OPM ENTS OF TH E SHAKESPEARE AN M EM ORIA L A SSOCIA TION B A H H y RT UR UTCH I NSON . NATUR E OF DRAM A T H E ENGL S D M E F E S E I . I H RA A B OR HAK SPEARE F E E I I . T HE SPIRIT O SHAKESP AR B EG I LD R B K LEY y R NA . UC . T H E STRAT FORD-UPON-A VON VACATION SCHOOL OF FOL K SONG AND DANCE B SH P . y C ECIL J. AR E FES L S F - N THE SHAKESPEAR TIVA , TRAT ORD UPO AVON I L L U S T R A T I O N S ’ ES E E S T M ENE THE S A ND T L E To SHAK P AR O B, B ATH BU T AB T H I S EM I N TH E C OF TH E H L T N M ORY, HURCH O Y RI ITY, A s GARLANDED WITH F L OWERS ON A PRI L 2 3 o D M cNeil] Stra ord-u on-A von P lzot by . , fi p T H E SHAKESPEARE M EM ORIA L T H EATRE AT STRATFORD - UPON-A VON P izota b A T ler Strat ord—u on-A von y . y , f p T HE P E LL E EM L T E E ICTUR GA RY, M ORIA H ATR P ho to b A T r y . yle M . F R . R H N EN N A E . B SO S RY V P /zoto b C/zancellor Dublin y , TH E C OF T HE H L T N F M HURCH O Y RI ITY, RO TH E R IVER A VON - - P /zoto b W. A Smit/z Stra ord u on A w n y . , gf p D N ES E A C OUTSIDE TH M EM ORIAL T H EATR E . P ho b to y A . Tyler TH E FESTI VAL I DEA . NS BY F R . B E ON T H E F E S T I VAL I D E A I A M very proud to be asked to contri bute to a work published by a firm so long associated with the name of J ohn Ruskin ; proud that o ur work at Stratford should be regarded , by the writers of it , as part of that campaign against the unloveliness of modern life in which Ruskin was the pro ni tag o st. The outlines of the dream that Mr . Charles Flower and the founders of the - - Stratford upon Avon Shakespeare Memorial , their friends and successors , have been dream ing and developing for more than thirty years may be summed up in the following general terms . Even if the exact shape of the towers be lost in the clouds , the rainbow and the sunshine , seemingly variable because ever growing ; if for a moment one is bewildered by the vast ness of its possibilities for the future , one is recalled to action in the present by the practical example o f the founder and by the joyous stir and bustle attending the Festival . One o f the 1 3 THE FE ( ST I VAL I D EA dream 15 that its foundation is on solid earth , formulated in bricks and mortar linked to Warwickshire soil by creeping plants and twining flowers . For the man and his co o workers , who will always have the chief h nour of designing the fabric , like the rest of our race, could do as well as dream . The picture has n many settings . H ere is o e o f them . I t is the first of May . The dreamer is lying on a smooth lawn by the river- side ; part of the garden attached to the theatre buildings . To the right , through a frame of rush and willow , yew and cedar and elm , the spire of the church lo oks down on the mill where Celt , Roman , Saxon and Dane, Nor man and E nglishman for Centuries have ground their harvest . In front, beyond the - field river , stretches the playing of the town ; secured to the towns - folk fo r ever by wise -fiel s burgesses . The playing d are deserted - to day , save for a few youths enjoying the last o f kick the season at a football , or their first renewal of the controversy between cricket bat com and ball . The leisure energy of the munity is occupied elsewhere . The clock in the old church tower strikes twelve , and the jackdaws and the starlings notify to the rooks that another sun has I 4 T H E FE S T I VAL I D EA Queen of the May , a fair little maiden seated on a throne of flowers in the midst of her court . The rough spear, entwined with ivy pointing upwards , connects the eternal homage paid by age to youth with the primitive worship from our ancestors to the earth and the sun . Then the Folk- songs o f our forefathers ring out blithely on the spring air, and the twinkling feet o f the little dancers on the grass catch ’ something of the rhythm o f Shakespeare s verse and the music of the spheres . Among the crowd are many people from over - seas ; blood brothers of the race , fellow subjects from distant parts of our Empire , friends from foreign countries all the world over— Scandi navia , the N etherlands , France , Germany , Russia , Austria , Italy, Switzerland , and the Balkans . The Spaniard, the Bohemian , the African , the Asiatic recognise in many of the dances some primitive ceremony still in vogue among their own folk to this day . I n the B room dance of an elderly but active villager the American from H onolulu notes as an old friend the spear dance of the Pacific I slanders . The I ndian Prince , guest of honour on this occasion , expresses his pleasure at being “ o f present with words full meaning . I will take back to my country the story o f yo ur 1 6 T H E F E ST I VA L I D E A song and your dance and your Shakespeare Festival , that my people may have more joy in their lives , and that your folk and my folk ’ u may better nderstand each other s religion . “ As said an Eastern in a bygone age , Your people shall be my people , and your gods my ” - o f gods . And then the May day part the Festival ends and the crowd disperse to their various tasks , and the Queen of the May steals forth in the afternoon to lay her crown and the ’ bouquet , given by the Mayor , on her father s recently made grave . For her , as for the others , sorrow sojourneth but for a season in the promise of the May . ’ ’ Th e n e o e her o e arth,that s atur s m th r, is t mb ; h r n e h e r . What is buryi g grav , that is e wo mb A nd fro m her wo mb children o f divers kind We sucking o n her natural b o so m find n e e c n Many for ma y virtu s x elle t , fo r o e and et ffe en . None but s m , y all di r t O c e the o e ce e , mi kl is p w rful gra that li s n o ne and e e e .

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    155 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us