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Author

Ian Mortimer

/ian-mortimer-quotes-and-sayings

8 Quotes
3 Works

Author Summary

About Ian Mortimer on QuoteMust

Ian Mortimer currently has 8 indexed quotes and 3 linked works on QuoteMust. This page is the canonical destination for that author archive.

Works

Books and titles linked to this author

The Outcasts of Time The Time Traveller's Guide to Elizabethan England The Time Traveller's Guide to Medieval England: A Handbook for Visitors to the Fourteenth Century

Quotes

All quote cards for Ian Mortimer

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__. H. Auden once suggested that to understand your own country you need to have lived in at least two others. One can say something similar for periods of time: to understand your own century you need to have come to terms with at least two others. The key to learning something about the past might be a ruin or an archive but the means whereby we may understand it is--and always will be--ourselves.

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Ian Mortimer

The Time Traveller's Guide to Medieval England: A Handbook for Visitors to the Fourteenth Century

"

As you sit there watching a performance of a Shakespeare, Johnson, or Marlowe play, the crowd will fade into the background. Instead, you will be struck by the diction. There are words and phrases that you will not find funny, but which will make the crowd roar with laughter. Your familiarity with the meanings of Shakespeare's words will rise and fall as you see and hear the actors' deliveries and notice the audience's reaction. That is the strange music of being so familiar with something that is not of your own time. What you are listening to in that auditorium is the genuine voice, something of which you have heard only distant echoes. Not every actor is perfect in his delivery; Shakespeare himself makes that quite clear in his Hamlet. But what you are hearing is the voice of the men for whom Shakespeare wrote his greatest speeches. Modern thespians will follow the rhythms or the meanings of these words, but even the most brilliant will not always be able to follow both rhythm and meaning at once. If they follow the pattern of the verse, they risk confusing the audience, who are less familiar with the sense of the words. If they pause to emphasize the meanings, they lose the rhythm of the verse. Here, on the Elizabethan stage, you have a harmony of performance and understanding that will never again quite be matched in respect of any of these great writers.

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Ian Mortimer

The Time Traveller's Guide to Elizabethan England