When you consider his background too - a glovemakers son educated at the local Stratford-Upon-Avon school in latin - his only experience of great theatre likely to have been in the city of Coventry, which was renowned for its Mystery Plays, and the theatrical entertainments put on for Quen Elizabeth I at nearby Kenilworth castle, before his emigration to London.
It often seems that Shakespeae is elitist because his works are promoted, discussed and written about in acaemic circles, but he was not an academic. He wasn't wealthy, at least when he was writing the plays, and he hadn't been to University. He was basically earning his crust when he wrote the plays. He was an ordinary man with an extraordinary talent.


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I commend your pithy retort.