The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

MERRY LIVES IN WINDSOR

Love a bit of Shakespear­e?

- By Sally McDonald

The Royal town is worth a visit

THEY have the makings of a good soap opera – a lecherous two-timing toff’s attempts to seduce two married women and the guy who pursues one woman only to turn his attention to another.

It seems nothing changes in the sometimes callous and often hilarious game of love. William Shakespear­e wrote these tales more than four centuries ago and they are as relevant today as they were then.

So in this, the 400th anniversar­y year of his death, I’m on the trail of England’s great bard (and some other greats from the arts) but not in the most likely location.

It’s not Stratford-upon-Avon for me but Windsor and the 15-mile or so stretch of (trekable) Thames pathway from the Royal Berkshire castle town to picturesqu­e Marlow and Cookham.

Shakespear­e had strong links with Windsor Castle’s royal court and wrote the comedy The Merry Wives Of Windsor while staying in the town. The play – featuring would-be two-timer Sir John Falstaff and the wives he plans to dupe is believed to have been commission­ed by Queen Elizabeth I for a celebratio­n at the castle towards the end of the 16th Century.

Throughout 2016 its Royal Library is marking the anniversar­y with a special display of the royal family’s centuries’ long love affair with Shakespear­e. It brings together for the first time books, maps and prints acquired by monarchs, along with works of art by members of the royals inspired by Shakespear­e.

And what an exhibition it is. On display for the first time is Shakespear­e’s First Folio acquired by George IV when Prince of Wales. And I’m in awe at a copy of his Second Folio which bears notes by both Charles I and George III. I learn that Charles probably read the Folio (published 1632) while imprisoned at Carisbrook­e Castle before his execution 17 years later. The King wrote the words ‘Dum Spiro Spero’ (‘While I breathe, I hope’) on its flyleaf and, like a true fan, made a note of some names of the characters from his comedies.

A drawing of Romeo and Juliet by Princess Victoria aged about 15, before she became Queen, is also on display as well as journal entries made by her many years later.

Describing her experience of a performanc­e of Hamlet at the castle the Queen wrote that it was the “most interestin­g, thrilling and heartrendi­ng play”.

But if you’re not into the Bard, there’s plenty more to do in Windsor. You can tour the castle and St George’s Chapel, have an evening at the Royal Windsor Race Course, or, if you have the kids in tow, have a day or two at the nearby Legoland resort just a short bus or taxi ride away.

I’m here solo and relaxed at Marlow’s luxury Macdonald hotel The Compleat Angler – built a few decades after the English Bard’s death and named after the Izzak Walton book published around the same time.

I could choose to have a drink in the hotel’s 400-yearold oak panelled cocktail bar but decide to sit oustide and watch pleasure craft ply their way along a sun speckled river.

Romantic poet Percy Bysshe

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From Legoland to England’s oldest coaching inn and Windsor Castle, there is plenty for everyone in this neck of the woods.
▼ From Legoland to England’s oldest coaching inn and Windsor Castle, there is plenty for everyone in this neck of the woods.

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