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King Edward III

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This eBook features the unabridged text of ‘King Edward III’ from the bestselling edition of ‘The Complete Works of William Shakespeare’.

Having established their name as the leading publisher of classic literature and art, Delphi Classics produce publications that are individually crafted with superior formatting, while introducing many rare texts for the first time in digital print. The Delphi Classics edition of Shakespeare includes original annotations and illustrations relating to the life and works of the author, as well as individual tables of contents, allowing you to navigate eBooks quickly and easily.

eBook features:* The complete unabridged text of ‘King Edward III’* Beautifully illustrated with images related to Shakespeare’s works* Individual contents table, allowing easy navigation around the eBook* Excellent formatting of the text

185 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 1592

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About the author

William Shakespeare

24.3k books48.1k followers
William Shakespeare was an English playwright, poet, and actor. He is widely regarded as the greatest writer in the English language and the world's pre-eminent dramatist. He is often called England's national poet and the "Bard of Avon" (or simply "the Bard"). His extant works, including collaborations, consist of some 39 plays, 154 sonnets, three long narrative poems, and a few other verses, some of uncertain authorship. His plays have been translated into every major living language and are performed more often than those of any other playwright. Shakespeare remains arguably the most influential writer in the English language, and his works continue to be studied and reinterpreted.
Shakespeare was born and raised in Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire. At the age of 18, he married Anne Hathaway, with whom he had three children: Susanna, and twins Hamnet and Judith. Sometime between 1585 and 1592, he began a successful career in London as an actor, writer, and part-owner ("sharer") of a playing company called the Lord Chamberlain's Men, later known as the King's Men after the ascension of King James VI and I of Scotland to the English throne. At age 49 (around 1613), he appears to have retired to Stratford, where he died three years later. Few records of Shakespeare's private life survive; this has stimulated considerable speculation about such matters as his physical appearance, his sexuality, his religious beliefs, and even certain fringe theories as to whether the works attributed to him were written by others.
Shakespeare produced most of his known works between 1589 and 1613. His early plays were primarily comedies and histories and are regarded as some of the best works produced in these genres. He then wrote mainly tragedies until 1608, among them Hamlet, Romeo and Juliet, Othello, King Lear, and Macbeth, all considered to be among the finest works in the English language. In the last phase of his life, he wrote tragicomedies (also known as romances) and collaborated with other playwrights.
Many of Shakespeare's plays were published in editions of varying quality and accuracy during his lifetime. However, in 1623, John Heminge and Henry Condell, two fellow actors and friends of Shakespeare's, published a more definitive text known as the First Folio, a posthumous collected edition of Shakespeare's dramatic works that includes 36 of his plays. Its Preface was a prescient poem by Ben Jonson, a former rival of Shakespeare, that hailed Shakespeare with the now famous epithet: "not of an age, but for all time".

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 176 reviews
Profile Image for Bill Kerwin.
Author 2 books84.7k followers
July 26, 2019

If this play is indeed Shakespeare--and it seems at least a part of it is--it wins the award for worst history play, beating "King John" by at least a length and a half. Like "John," it is an episodic, shambling thing, but it has nothing half as good as the bastard Falconbridge to recommend it.

Some of the verse, particularly in the Countess of Salisbury sequence, possesses a grace uncharacteristic of the play, and imagery which is felicitous if not memorable. In addition, there is a scene in which the Black Prince and the aged Lord Audley prepare to fight against daunting odds (IV.iv) that is very well constructed and deeply affecting.

Other than that, the only remarkable thing about the play is that it seems in a very rough sense to have provided many of the elements of Henry V: a discussion of Salic law, stirring speeches before battle, French jokes about the beef-eating English, British ethnic rivalry (this time Scots, not Welsh), and a king who goes a-wooing. All this is executed much more sympathetically--and more artfully--in the later play, but, still, the essential elements are here.
Profile Image for Michael Finocchiaro.
Author 3 books6,368 followers
April 7, 2022
Great action scenes despite the many anachronisms, Edward III is still rewarding. It is the first of the great War of the Roses cycle (before Richard II, Henry IV Parts 1&2, Henry V, Henry VI Parts 1-3, and the inimitable Richard III). The authorship of this one by the Bard has long been contested, but most modern critics allow that Shakespeare wrote at least several acts himself.

Edward III takes power after his mother Isabella of France and her alleged lover Mortimer forced Edward II to step down. A succession controversy for the Frenc throne provokes the beginning of the One Hundred Years War when Edward III claims, rightly it would seem, the French throne. The French find a legendary Salic law that reserves the throne to male descendants which disqualifies Edward who was claiming the title through his mother Isabella. So, if you think Shakespeare is confusing, the real story that he is telescoping and abbreviating is far more complex!

In Shakespeare's play, the action is non-stop with battles galore. Edward III was particularly lucky to have won successively the battles of Sluys, Crécy and Poitiers against the French and thereby established a massive foothold on the continent. As explained in Norwich's Shakespeare's Kings: The Great Plays and the History of England in the Middle Ages: 1337-1485, the Bard does not respect the timeline, but he does a fairly good job of capturing the momentum of events and draws memorable portraits of the various actors. I would also highly suggest the excellent A Distant Mirror: The Calamitous 14th Century for more about this tumultuous period, but seen from a more French point of view.

One of Shakespeare's greatest characterizations in this play is the godlike Edward, the Black Prince. He is Edward III's heir and an incredible warrior with a relatively realistic, but characteristically dark personality:

Audley, the arms of death embrace us round,
And comfort have we none, save that to die
We pay sower earnest for a sweeter life.
At Cressey field out Clouds of Warlike smoke
Choked up those French mouths & dissevered them;
But now their multitudes of millions hide,
Masking as twere, the beauteous burning Sun,
Leaving no hope to us, but sullen dark
And eyeless terror of all ending night.

Edward III - Act IV Scene IV

In one of the most memorable scenes in the play, the Black Prince is about to succumb to overwhelming French numbers around him and Edward III is asked several times by his advisors to send reinforcements to help him. Edward III prefers to let the Black Prince fight his way out.

ARTOIS.
Rescue, king Edward! rescue for thy son!

KING EDWARD.
Rescue, Artois? what, is he prisoner,
Or by violence fell beside his horse?

ARTOIS.
Neither, my Lord: but narrowly beset
With turning Frenchmen, whom he did pursue,
As tis impossible that he should scape,
Except your highness presently descend.

KING EDWARD.
Tut, let him fight; we gave him arms to day,
And he is laboring for a knighthood, man.

[Enter Derby.]

DARBY.
The Prince, my Lord, the Prince! oh, succour him!
He's close incompast with a world of odds!

KING EDWARD.
Then will he win a world of honor too,
If he by valour can redeem him thence;
If not, what remedy? we have more sons
Than one, to comfort our declining age.

Edward III Act 3 Scene V

The Black Prince, of course, prevails and captures King John II and in the closing scene, the English retake Calais (including the scene of the Burghers of Calais immortalized by Rodin centuries later) and seem to be poised for total domination setting the stage for the tragedy of Richard II.

This play is a fantastic read, but it does help to do one's homework to understand the historical events behind the action. It is non-stop and a great start to the long cycle.

Fino's Reviews of Shakespeare and Shakespearean Criticism
Comedies
The Comedy of Errors (1592-1593
The Taming of the Shrew (1593-1594)
The Two Gentlemen of Verona (1594-1595)
Love's Labour's Lost (1594-1595)
A Midsummer Night's Dream (1595-1596)
The Merchant of Venice (1596-1597)
Much Ado About Nothing (1598-1599)
As You Like It (1599-1600)
Twelfth Night (1599-1600)
The Merry Wives of Windsor (1600-1601)
All's Well That Ends Well (1602-1603)
Measure for Measure (1604-1605)
Cymbeline (1609-1610)
A Winter's Tale (1610-1611)
The Tempest (1611-1612)
Two Noble Kinsmen (1612-1613)

Histories
Henry VI Part I (1589-1590)
Henry VI Part II (1590-1591)
Henry VI Part III (1590-1591)
Richard III (1593-1594)
Richard II (1595-1596)
King John (1596-1597)
Edward III (1596-1597)
Henry IV Part I (1597-1598)
Henry IV Part II (1597-1598)
Henry V (1598-1599)
Henry VIII (1612-1612)

Tragedies
Titus Andronicus (1592-1593)
Romeo and Juliet (1594-1595)
Julius Caesar (1599-1600)
Hamlet (1600-1601)
Troilus and Cressida (1601-1602)
Othello (1604-1605)
King Lear (1605-1606)
Macbeth (1605-1606)
Anthony and Cleopatra (1606-1607)
Coriolanus (1607-1608)
Timon of Athens (1607-1608)
Pericles (1608-1609)

Shakespearean Criticism
The Wheel of Fire by Wilson Knight
A Natural Perspective by Northrop Frye
Shakespeare After All by Marjorie Garber
Shakespeare's Roman Plays and Their Background by M W MacCallum
Shakespearean Criticism 1919-1935 compiled by Anne Ridler
Shakespearean Tragedy by A.C. Bradley
Shakespeare's Sexual Comedy by Hugh M. Richmond
Shakespeare: The Comedies by R.P. Draper
Tyrant: Shakespeare on Politics by Stephen Greenblatt
1599: A Year in the Life of William Shakespeare by James Shapiro

Collections of Shakespeare
Venus and Adonis, the Rape of Lucrece and Other Poems
Shakespeare's Sonnets and a Lover's Complaint
The Complete Oxford Shakespeare
Profile Image for Melora.
576 reviews171 followers
March 13, 2017
Wow. In its own way this is worse than Titus Andronicus. Less gruesome, and, unlike "Titus," the characters have plausible motivations, but this is so stunningly incoherent that it deserves some sort of special recognition. Oh, and an "English king" play where we are cheering for the French? Edward III, much like Titus, has enough sons that he regards them as utterly disposable -- never an attractive characteristic in a father.
Profile Image for Bernie Gourley.
Author 1 book119 followers
December 28, 2020
This play, one of the histories attributed to Shakespeare, is among those that have only in recent decades come to be included in The Bard’s canon. While the current consensus among Shakespeare experts seems to be that this play was authored or co-authored by Shakespeare, it remains possible that it wasn’t or that it was only partially written by him. [Fun fact: Shakespeare was known to collaborate, even though only experts know anything about any of his collaborators -- and even then it largely seems to be educated guesswork.]

This is not among the most narratively satisfying of Shakespeare’s plays, but histories inherently face the issue of following the events as they happened – at least in some degree. Even kings don’t necessarily live drama-shaped lives. The play addresses two major events in Edward’s life. The first is his unsuccessful wooing of a beautiful Countess after the King’s forces drive back a Scottish attack on the Earl of Salisbury’s castle. This part follows the common dramatic theme of the mere presence of a beautiful woman draining men of both virtue and smarts. For a time, the Countess simply rebuffs Edward’s advances, but when that doesn’t work, she tells him that the only way they can be together is if each one murders their current spouse. The Countess only says this to snap Edward out of it, but when he agrees to take her up on the bargain, she changes tack. She tells Edward that if he doesn’t quit his pursuit of her, she will end her own life. This does snap Edward out of his horn-dog induced insanity.

The second story line involves King Edward’s fight to claim the crown in France. While many will find this the more gripping part of the play, it’s not King Edward III, but rather his son Prince Edward, who is really the hero of this fight. It’s Prince Edward who is engaged in the most savage fighting and who narrowly ekes out a victory.

While this may not be as engaging and gripping as Shakespeare’s tragedies or comedies, it is an interesting way to glimpse history. I have little knowledge of British history, and can’t really say how accurate the depiction of events is, but Shakespeare generally follows the basic contours of events as accurately as was probably known at the time. I highly recommend all of Shakespeare’s works, but if you don’t have time for them all, this is probably one you’ll set aside for the time being.
Profile Image for Paul Frandano.
494 reviews15 followers
May 31, 2020
Better than you might expect, a virtual template, with the young Black Prince Edward, for Henry V, and wirh the inimitable, Immortal Bard unmistakably writing the entire second act and ostensibly touching up a lot else that had been written by...who? Best guess, Kit Marlowe. Others? George Steele? Thomas Dekker? Thomas Kyd? The New Cambridge Shakespeare edition sparkles with information on the history of the play, probably written in 1592-1594 time frame, its principal sources and how the authors used them, its liberal departures from the true history and participants, both English and French, in the campaign of 1346-1347, performance history, speculation on why Heminges and Condell might have left King Edward III out of the First Folio, play criticism, more. In short, a solid scholarly edition, nicely annotated, with an extensive bibliography (c. 1998). Probably for Bardolators only, but more enjoyable - for me, anyway - than The Two Noble Kinsmen.

But the highest compliment I can pay this lovely volume is that it's as good an Arden Shakespeare in its clarity, annotations, commentary, and general completeness (although I do prefer the compact Ardens for the way they fit in my hand and line up on the shelf). Thst said, I've struck the Arden Edward III off my wish list. No need here for a redundant text: I'm no scholar, merely a recreational Bardolator.
Profile Image for Illiterate.
2,954 reviews61 followers
July 22, 2025
A study of kingship. The first part contrasts public role and personal desire. The rest focuses on the public role: oaths, honor, leadership, courage, war.
Profile Image for Kim.
219 reviews6 followers
August 26, 2025
A new Shakespeare play? This is my Shakespeare group’s August play, but it is not in my old Complete Shakespeare college textbook. Apparently Shakespearean scholarly research finding that Shakespeare was very likely a significant coauthor of this play led to it being added to The New Cambridge Shakespeare series more recently, legitimizing its inclusion in the Shakespeare canon. It was rendered obscure by not being included in the First Folio. It may also have been retired and quietly disappeared because it was written before Scottish James Stuart succeeded Elizabeth I to the throne and it includes the English defeat of an unfavorably characterized Scottish king and populace.

It is an odd play, almost like two different plays, because on his way to France to take back the French crown from King John (the beginning of the Hundred Years’ War), Edward first goes to Scotland to put down a rebellion, and while there takes an extended frolic wooing a countess with whom he falls in lust at first sight. He spends half the play trying to convince or coerce her to submit to him (though they are both married to others), but she is another of Shakespeare’s plucky clever women who verbally outmaneuvers the King threatening her, winning her own battle over control of her own domain. Having won his political but not amorous battles in Scotland, King Edward spends the second half of the play taking France (with valuable help from his son and the husband of the aforementioned countess) from King John, which includes taking the Burghers of Calais (as in the famous Rodin sculpture) prisoner. I thoroughly enjoyed this play. The poetry, metaphors, double meanings, and all those literary balletics were wonderful and the story was so much less gory than the Wars of the Roses and Titus Andronicus plays of the last few months. And though the story was largely about a rape that almost happened and a war (in which unfortunately many people were killed, but all off-stage and none of them characters we we met), there was so much comic relief that the play often felt like lighter fare. A theme that features heavily throughout the play is Chivalric honor requiring one to keep oaths and vows. We learn about these as the doltish King Edward has to be continually instructed in them by everyone around him. Sometimes the arguments over which vows and oaths have precedence when they conflict veer into comical extremes. Are you always bound to your word—even when it was given under false pretenses or under duress to your enemy in war? Another theme is that God will be on the side of the the most honorable king, that Edward triumphs over John because he is the most “honorable”, but we see that King Edward has no honorable instincts and is only kept on the “honorable” path by those around him, most notably the countess, his son, and his wife, none of whom he treats well. I can’t quite pinpoint why I enjoyed this play as much as I did. Also, all the notes and critical and historical additional information in this Arden edition enriched my experience reading this play.
Profile Image for Ian.
142 reviews
February 8, 2021
An anonymous play, increasingly believed to be a collaborative work of Shakespeare and another playwright, perhaps Kyd, Marlowe, Drayton, Nashe or Peele. I can see Shakespeare, based on the style. In fact, I see more of Shakespeare in Edward III than I did in Pericles, which I also read this month. Not sure why Marlowe is a contender; he writes interesting stories, but in a morbidly boring style that I didn't recognize in this play. I'm not familiar enough with the works of the others to have an opinion.

As for the story here, it's not particularly interesting, but the style tends toward engaging. I struggled to find a connection between Edward's attempted seduction of the Countess of Salisbury and the invasion of France. He was not welcomed by either? He had no right to either? The latter would be strange given that there is considerable pro-invasion propaganda, unless intended ironically (which would be even more odd).
Profile Image for Jennifer.
946 reviews
July 15, 2024
I found this one more difficult, in part because I could not do my regular reading habit. Normally I read a Folger's copy with the notes and listen to an Arkangel recording at the same time. This one is non-canonical and is probably only partially written by Shakespeare, so there was no recording and no Folgers. I did my best without those tools, but I felt it.
Another history play. More conflict between England and France, a very common theme.
Profile Image for Brenton.
Author 2 books84 followers
Read
January 12, 2026
Though published anonymously, this seems to me far more Shakespearian than Henry VIII.
Profile Image for Phil.
648 reviews36 followers
November 12, 2012
One of the Bard's apocrypha - the plays that didn't make the cut for the Folio, for whatever reason, and weren't captured in the early additions (as plays like Pericles and Two Noble Kinsmen were). Although now widely thought to be partly by Shakespeare, there's division of opinion about how much.

I find Shakespeare authorship arguments hard to fathom sometimes, because when you get past the not-always-reliable text analysis, it usually boils down to "if it's not great, let's say it's not by Shakespeare", which is like saying that because 'Ebony and Ivory' isn't as good as 'Back Seat of My Car', 'Maybe I'm Amazed' or 'Yesterday' it must have been written by somebody other than Paul McCartney.

I'm reading the plays of Shakespeare in something approximating writing order and I can see absolutely nothing in this play that suggest that it wasn't written by the same hands that wrote the Henry VI trilogy, Titus Andronicus, Venus and Adonis or Taming of the Shrew.

Probably written during the period when London theatres were closed for plague, Shakespeare had to survive by writing poetry but he also spend several years working up in the North West for Lord Derby - whose ancestor appears susiciously prominently in this text.

Apart from Lord Derby's praises other things that point to Shakespeare writing it are the quotes that will later appear in the published sonnets - a long sequence comparing Lady Salisbury to a Summer's day is particular interesting and I absolutely don't accept that the writing in this play is substandard - the only weak spot are the opening two scenes where Edward 3 sets the scene about his battles on all fronts and the Scots looking ridiculous and cowardly on Lady Salisbury's castle doorstep, once Edward III arrives at the castle and falls head over heels for her, the poetry of love, seduction, war and chivalry matches the very best in the Henry VI plays and a lot of his later work too. I wondered sometimes if I was reading a different play from that which the critics are so sniffingly dismissive - and weaknesses could easily be explained by the fact that this play never went through the First Folio editing, refining process.

One train of thought as to why this play wasn't included in the Folio (it was definitely known about at that time) is that it's so dismissive and insulting of the Scots and the kingdom now had a Scottish (and pretty dour, humourless and easily rancoured) King in James VI (or James I in English money). So in the same way Shakespeare might have mocked the Scots to please Elizabeth I, the editors left it out to please James I. It's not due to the Quarto being anonymous, because plenty of others included were also anonymous.

Reading the play, it's a little dual-personalitied, the opening two acts deal with a love-struck king wanting to seduce Lady Salisbury (both being married) and when he doesn't manage to persuade her with his own words, gets her Dad to pimp her to him on his behalf - when she refuses him, he sees the error of his ways and rushes off to conquer France with his son, whom he leaves to his own devices to almost die in a battle against hard odds in order to teach him the life lesson that he won't always be rescued from scrapes, but then he wins so everything's alright.

The theme of the play, however, is about oaths, promises and keeping one's word. This crops up right through - starting with the seduction, which makes perfect sense in this context: Edward want to break the marriage vows he'd made in front of God and Lady Salisbury refuses upon threat of her death. By not breaking the marriage vows he is able to go to France and win victory, because King John is an oath-breaker and thus divine judgement rules against him and the English win despite being outnumbered 10 to 1.

So - in summation, don't take the critics' word at face value for this play; they mostly hate it, but I can tell you that it's actually rather good: especially Acts II and IV.
Profile Image for Mike.
764 reviews18 followers
December 31, 2017
Edward III is an odd little play that feels disjointed but definitely not bad. It has been partly attributed to William Shakespeare, perhaps as much as 50% and as either revisionist of an original script or a true co-written work. In either part, Shakespeare is part of Edward III and so I read on.

My reading and enjoyment of the play was probably aided by watching at production of it a few months back at The Shakespeare Tavern. I anticipated a performance I'd sit through in order to scratch it from my Cannon list but ended up enjoying the show. I found the same experience when I read it. The writing is okay and the story line is bumpy but it's not bad. The first third of the play doesn't seem to mesh with the later parts. The lusty Edward struggles to jive with the warrior Edward. None-the-less, I'm glad I read (and watched) the apocryphal play.

Favorite quotes:
"To die is all as common as to live / The one in choice the other holds in chase; / For from the instant we begin to live / We do pursue and hunt the time to die."
Profile Image for Ilia.
363 reviews3 followers
March 30, 2024
The strongest part of the play is the bits purportedly by Shakespeare – the scenes in which a King demands that a countess sleep with him, and how the countess manages to navigate the conflicting allegiances to her husband and her sovereign. The drama of the scenario is all the more effective for the bits of absurd situational comedy that peep through, like Edward switching from writing love poetry to pretending to study maps and military manoeuvres when someone walks in. That moment effectively collapses the pull between human desires and political duties.

The countess escapes the King’s clutches with a bit of legalese about the precedence of oaths – a theme that is picked up in the rest of the play, where kings give orders that overrule the commitments they and their officials make, and have to be talked back into respecting the rules. Everyone ultimately does what they are supposed to do, which is why Marlowe’s Edward II and Shakespeare’s Richard II are more interesting histories, as these Kings push the system past breaking point and lose their lives as a result.
Profile Image for Emily D..
917 reviews25 followers
March 11, 2020
In the first part of this play, King Edward III basically needs to take a cold shower. He is so stupidly distracted by the Countess, and they are both married, and he's got war things to do, so it's quite the hang up. Then the Countess finally convinces him to leave her alone, and he finally feels sheepish and goes and does the warry things.
Profile Image for Richard Seltzer.
Author 28 books136 followers
July 17, 2020
I read this as research for my novel the Shakespeare Twins.
Profile Image for Keith Taylor.
Author 20 books96 followers
February 13, 2019
The star system doesn't work with this book! Probably only partially Shakespeare, and even that is not very good Shakespeare. Do we put it beside "Lear" and say bad? That doesn't reflect the pleasure I took in reading it. Do we put it beside books that I felt more deeply engaged with, and say it doesn't measure up? That doesn't seem useful. Do we talk about the editing and say it's thorough, smart and witty? Well, maybe, because it is. But really I read it because I want to have read all of Shakespeare, and I didn't know that this play had been accepted into the canon. In fact, I'd never heard of it! The "Complete Shakespeare" in the Cambridge Edition that I used in 1970 - 72, the years I spent the most time with Shakespeare, has no mention of this.

The scenes of the attempted infidelity seem particularly Shakespearean and are fun to read, even though they seem to come from way outside the play and don't lead in any particular direction (other than toward the theme of oaths kept and broken). The battles reported in lengthy iambic pentameter descriptions are not unique to Shakespeare; they reflect a convention of the time. But I loved them!

So is it a great play? Probably not. I don't really have any interest in seeing it on stage -- unless someone came up with a very unexpected way of staging it. But I loved sitting down with it, reading the play and all the critical apparati that came with it. If anyone shares my nonprofessional's interest in Shakespeare, I feel pretty confident they will feel the same way.
Profile Image for Nicholas.
248 reviews1 follower
April 7, 2023
Inoffensively ok; the play was fairly readable but nothing special. Act 2 is a weird sideplot where the king has a crush on the married daughter of one of his nobles; he tries to pursue an adulterous affair with her to the point of proposing the murders of his Queen and the woman's husband. After this it returns to the main action of war between the English and French armies and the Countess is never mentioned again. A major theme in the play is honour, reflected in this Countess who maintains her honour and that of the King, the Queen who persuades him to act honourably in victory, Prince Edward who seeks to defend the honour of England and the crown, and Charles who stops his father, King of France, from dishonouring himself. It is conveyed that victory is achieved by those with superior honour
Profile Image for Ginger Stephens.
319 reviews12 followers
March 15, 2020
This is a most confusing play. It may help to see it live, but reading it, or listening to it, is difficult. It reminds me of King John, which I also found confusing with a muddled plot. Edward III is also hard to follow and it is difficult to keep the characters straight.

I know that Shakespeare only wrote part of it, or rewrote the work of another playwright. I suspect that the speeches that Edward makes about the Countess of Salisbury were written by Shakespeare. They sound like some of the soliloquy’s from Romeo and Juliet. Like a Romeo and Juliet, those are the best parts.

This was a very early work and Shakespeare got much better at his craft. We can always be thankful for that.
Profile Image for Jason Anger.
57 reviews
January 17, 2023
Though written with others, and despite what I perceive to be a general dislike of this play, I thought it quite good, actually. King Edward is at times a perfect cad, but the interaction between he, his son, and his wife as they achieve their destiny of rule at the expense of the king of France is very entertaining.

Of special interest to myself is the scene wherein we get a glimpse into how the war is affecting the peasantry of France, an effect very common to Shakespeare.

Even if not one of his principal masterpieces, it shows a maturing playwright and contains beautiful language and intricate plot.

Next up, Richard II!
Profile Image for Rebecca Fell.
215 reviews
May 21, 2023
This was a bit of a mixed bag of a play. From an academic perspective it was great for gender and sovereignty analysis, comparing really well with plays like “Pericles”, “The Tempest” and “Titus Andronicus”. However, from a pure enjoyment perspective it was a bit boring; the battle scenes were incredibly repetitive and the first part- which was honestly the best part- of the play felt like a completely different play to the second part of the play. I know that it’s supposed to reflect how chivalric honour acts as salvation of sin but I think the play would have been a lot more enjoyable if the Duchess of Salisbury plot line was revisited.
Profile Image for Shannon.
772 reviews115 followers
July 27, 2020
I found this one a bit all over in terms of the story, and felt like there were a few things that were set up, but never came back to .

I think I need to get a bit of a chronological overview to more fully appreciate historical. I've read enough now to know a few things from a few periods, but not what connect or what is before/after each other. That's more a note on my reading than the actual play!
5,870 reviews144 followers
September 24, 2020
King Edward III is an Elizabethan play printed anonymously in 1596, and partly written by William Shakespeare, having now become accepted as part of Shakespeare's canon of plays.

Prince Edward (The Black Prince) broods on the morality of war before achieving victory in the Battle of Poitiers against seemingly insurmountable odds. He captures the French king. In Calais the citizens realize they will have to surrender to King Edward.

King Edward III is written mediocrity well, which is rather odd attributing to Shakespeare. King Edward III is informed by the Count of Artois that he, Edward, was the true heir to the previous king of France. A French ambassador arrives to insist that Edward do homage to the new French king for his lands in Guyenne. Edward defies him, insisting he will invade to enforce his rights. Themes of National Pride and Forbidden Love abounds.

This Cambridge University Press edition of the play has an introductory essay written Giorgio Melchiori from the Università degli Studi Roma Tre, textual notes and analysis, two appendices, and an additional reading list.

All in all, King Edward III is a good play that is loosely based on events during the reign of Edward III.
Profile Image for Michael.
195 reviews
January 20, 2020
Excellent scholarly edition of an interesting work by Shakespeare and collaborators. Read in Kindle edition. Awarding four rather than five stars because the Kindle format had blue links on phrases glossed, making the text of the play anything but pleasant to read.
Profile Image for Elizabeth.
144 reviews
November 21, 2024
Eh it was fine? It felt like two completely different plays, the first half being a romantic farce, the second a war drama. Each half was fine, but combined they became less than the sum of their parts.
Profile Image for Cameron Rhoads.
441 reviews6 followers
June 8, 2026
Physically read and throughly enjoyed this apocryphal Shakespearean play.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 176 reviews