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OverviewEvery Man a KingdomYou are the end point of an unbroken chain of survival. Every person who came before you - through plague, war, famine, and flood - lived long enough to pass forward what was necessary for you to exist. You did not begin when you were born. You began when humanity began. Everything that happened between that beginning and this moment is not the past in any abstract sense. It is the story of the making of you. This book takes you to one of the most extraordinary moments in that story. London. Bankside. 1599-1606. A round, thatched theatre rises on the south bank of the Thames. Three thousand Londoners - apprentices, earls, merchants, and servants - stand in the same open yard, breathing the same air, watching the same stage. A playwright delivers pages and goes home without explanation. A young man behind a curtain holds the whole play in his hands while every actor holds only his part. A single question sits at the heart of this book: What if the stage did not install a kingdom in the people watching - but revealed the one already there? What does it mean that a prince asking whether to live or die made three thousand people hold their breath - not because they pitied him, but because they recognised him? What is the difference between a performance and a mirror - when the audience cannot tell which one they are standing in front of? Who holds the whole when everyone else holds only their part? The facts are extraordinary enough. The Globe Theatre was built in 1599 from the dismantled timbers of a previous theatre, hauled across the frozen Thames by night to evade a landlord. Shakespeare's company was paid forty shillings to perform Richard II - a play about a king's deposition - the afternoon before the Earl of Essex's rebellion. They were summoned before the Privy Council. They were not punished. The plague of 1603 killed thirty thousand Londoners in a single season and closed the theatres for months. John Florio's 1603 English translation of Montaigne introduced a single sentence that changed everything: Every man bears the entire form of the human condition within him. Not one page of Shakespeare's original manuscripts survives. The plays exist because two old men spent a year above a printshop gathering pages from prompt-books that a book-keeper had never returned. History is not a sequence of dates. It is the record of billions of lives lived forward through a present that felt, to each of them, exactly as urgent as yours does now. They paid a penny and stood in the October cold. They smelled the Thames and the tallow and the roasting nuts from the yard vendors. They leaned forward in the third verse of a willow song when a boy's voice cracked on a single note - and did not know why the cracking moved them more than the perfection had. For homeschooling families: You are already doing the most important thing - putting the story of humanity directly into your children's hands. The Beyond His Story We Stand series was written for you. Each book takes one moment in human history and makes it lived rather than memorised, felt rather than filed away. Not a textbook. Not a syllabus. A story your child will not want to put down - and that will leave them asking the questions that only wonder produces. Every Man a Kingdom is part of the Beyond His Story We Stand series - a chronological journey through human history, told through the eyes of the people official history forgot to record. The plays survived. They survived because someone chose to hold them. That someone is now you. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Michael McGilbournePublisher: Independently Published Imprint: Independently Published Volume: 37 Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.00cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.209kg ISBN: 9798259238732Pages: 176 Publication Date: 28 April 2026 Audience: Young adult , Teenage / Young adult Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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