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"Shakespeare did not have to leave England to know that he was living amid the ruins of Rome. He and his contemporaries constantly encountered the physical remains of the ancient conquerors, their still-standing bridges, uncannily straight roads, baths, walls, and half-broken battlements; their fragmented statues and coins, perfume bottles and monumental inscriptions routinely unearthed from the loam. Still more, anyone with a grammar school education was steeped in the cultural remains of Rome, the language, history, stories, and underlying beliefs that had once ruled much of the world. Maria Del Sapio Garbero's book focuses on the remarkable succession of plays, along with the narrative poem "The Rape of Lucrece", in which Shakespeare directly engaged with Roman themes. Richly learned, probing, and intellectually generous, Shakespeare's Ruins and Myth of Rome is an essential guide to these works. But it is also a brilliant guide to what it means here and now to think creatively with the traces of the shattered past. This book itself is what it says of its great subject: 'A field of possibilities springing out of a field of ruins.'" Stephen Greenblatt, Cogan University Professor of the Humanities at Harvard