a hornbook. showed the basic alphabet and a prayer
It would appear not. There is a reference to Richard Burbage being paid to paint an armorial device which was built by a Mr. Shaksper. There is some debate whether this was actually William Shakespeare or another person, but in any event it was not Shakespeare who was hired to do the painting.
The first Globe burned down on June 29, 1613 during a performance of Shakespeare's Henry VIII. But it is misleading to call it "Shakespeare's first theatre". Shakespeare was not the owner of it and nobody at the time would ever have associated it particularly with Shakespeare, but rather with Richard Burbage, the famous actor who with his brother owned half of the theatre. It was not the first theatre to see Shakespeare act or the first to see his plays performed. It was the first theatre Shakespeare invested in in a small way (the second was the Blackfriars) and only in this sense can it be thought of as his first theatre.
Shakespeare wrote at least 38 first scenes. Which would you like to talk about?
It would be some form of a drum.
Shakespeare wrote several sonnets, you would have to be more specific.
It would have been highly unlikely. Although Shakespeare had a good rep as a writer in his day, they didn't invite writers to come and talk at schools. Schools spent all their time teaching and examining students.
PC. The maker and founder of the game Notch tested it out on a computer so that would be the first device.
You mean, probably, "What was the famous collection of poems Shakespeare wrote?" This would be The Sonnets, all 154 of them, first published in 1609.
Shakespeare would say "Wherefore art though?"
yes i would pick teaching because you help other people
Nobody knows when Shakespeare started work in the theatre. At the time he was an unimportant guy and nobody thought he would ever be anything else.
No, not really, for a couple of reasons. The technology necessary to make thermometers was being discovered during Shakespeare's lifetime, but was not applied to any kind of device which would be available to anyone not a scientist. Even if you were to say that thermometer-like devices had been made before Shakespeare's death, there is no way Shakespeare could have got his hands on one. Secondly, the word "thermometer" was not invented until eight years after Shakespeare's death. Most people in Shakespeare's day would think about heat and cold as subjective sensations not objective measurable qualities of objects.