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Falstaff

‘Why, thou owest God a death’: Falstaff, Prince Hal, Henry IV, and Hanukkah

Happy Hanukkah! The Jewish holiday commemorates a military victory over the Greeks achieved in 164 B.C., after a four-year guerrilla war. Four years prior, in 168 B.C., a Greek army seized the great Temple in Jerusalem and rededicated it to Zeus. The Jews accepted that insult, but could not accept an imperial edict ordering the death of any Jew who observed Jewish rituals, and a further order that Jews actively worship the Greek gods. Loyalty oaths are still a thing today, of course. (Anti-racism, anyone? Of course we’re all against …

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‘To smother up his beauty from the world’: An Ex-Gang Member and Henry V

Elementary school gym teacher and now Missouri Teacher of the Year Darrion Cockrell is a modern-day Prince Hal. In the two Henry IV plays, Hal, who later becomes Henry V, is depicted as a wastrel and ne’er-do-well unsuited to the crown that awaits him. His closest friend is the infamous Falstaff, and the two spend their time trading insults, carousing with drinking buddies, and even planning robberies from their headquarters in the Boar’s Head Tavern in Eastcheap, London (sack is wine; capons here are cooked chickens; bawds are pimps; leaping-houses …

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