Robert Herrick
Robert Herrick
Yes
Ben Jonson
discuss the question I'll tell you. .......... We know that Ben Jonson was a close friend of Shakespeare, because Ben Jonson discussed talked at length about Shakespeare (both as a man and as a writer) in 'Discoveries' (a sort of blog that Jonson published late in life) and in his 'Conversations with William Drummond of Hawthornden' (a record of several conversations he had with a Scottish friend). Jonson's most famous comment about Shakespeare is that he 'loved the man (this side idolatry)'. After Shakespeare's death, when his colleagues John Heminge and Henry Condell assembled a complete plays (The First Folio - Shakespeare never published a collected edition during his lifetime) they asked Ben Jonson to write the dedicatory poem. (Ben Jonson: 'To the Reader' - First Folio). There are many other testimonies to Jonson's close friendship with Shakespeare. But Jonson's own words are the best evidence.
Ben Jonson
Ben Jonson correct me if i am wrong
Robert Herrick
Ben Jonson's birth name is Benjamin Jonson.
To Ben Jonson, humor meant a type of character trait or temperament that influenced a person's behavior and actions. He applied the concept of humor to his characters in his plays to create a sense of realism and depth in their portrayals.
Ben Jonson Journal was created in 1993.
Ben Jonson's unfinished work is titled "The Sad Shepherd." It is a pastoral play that reflects Jonson's exploration of rural themes and characters, combining elements of comedy and tragedy. Although incomplete, it showcases Jonson's poetic style and thematic concerns with nature and society. The play was left unfinished at the time of his death, and only fragments of it survive.
BEN JONSON has written: 'The New Inn: Or, The Light Heart' -- subject(s): Accessible book 'Ben Jonson - Five Plays' 'Conversations of Ben Jonson with William Drummond of Hawthornden' -- subject(s): Accessible book 'The Alchemist' -- subject(s): Accessible book
"On My First Son" by Ben Jonson is classified as an elegy, which is a type of poem that laments the death of a person. In this case, Jonson is mourning the death of his young son.
Yes
Ben Jonson
Westminster, London, England
11th June 1572
Ben Jonson.