he feel very good and he loves nat
Yes he does. This is because Nat Field of the 16th century has the bubonic plague otherwise known as "Black Death" which is impossibly incurable at that time. His namesake, Nat Field, of modern times is an actor of Shakespeare's plays. Somehow, both Nat's switch places and 16th century Nat's bubonic plague is easily cured while modern Nat performs a play with Shakespeare who becomes almost like his missing father figure in his life. The King of Shadows by Susan Cooper is a genius idea of a story and it is filled with action and adventure. :)
In chapter 1 of "King of Shadows," we meet a young actor named Nat Field who is selected to participate in an experimental production of Shakespeare's "A Midsummer Night's Dream." During a performance, Nat is unexpectedly transported back in time to Shakespearean London where he faces the challenges of adapting to his new surroundings. Through his experiences, Nat gains a deeper understanding of Shakespeare's world and his own inner strength.
She was saddened obviously.
woah
Yes, as far as we can tell. He seems to have been friends with Richard Field, who was from Stratford and was about Shakespeare's age. Field published Shakespeare's poem Venus and Adonis. Both Anne and Will Shakespeare were friends with their neighbours Judith and Hamnet Sadler--they named their twins after them and Hamnet was one of the witnesses to Shakespeare's will.
Yes, I feel lonely without Rosalina.
Shakespeare did not say that. It is an internet meme which has somehow become attached to Shakespeare.
We have no records of what Shakespeare did or did not like or what he did or did not feel. Presumably he liked what he did well enough to keep on doing it for two decades.
Nat nat means Hoe
He discovered the antibiotic penicillin. ---> Sa NAT yan no? HAHAHA :))
I guess it means that although I cannot write like Shakespeare, you can feel the same feelings he did. Which may be true, but doesn't matter because it is Shakespeare's writing, not his feelings, which is important.
You must mean in the movie Shakespeare in Love, where Shakespeare has given the false name "Christopher Marlowe" and believes that his (Shakespeare's) enemies have killed Marlowe by mistake. This is an entirely fictional story for which there is no basis in fact.