Foreign Policy Magazine

Man of the World

Shakespeare may never have left England, but he became the most global writer who ever lived.

In the run-up to Brexit in June, as Fleet Street tried to figure out why the Leave campaign was so alluring to voters, some observers employed a famous phrase again and again: “this scepter’d isle,” a description of England in William Shakespeare’s Richard II. A scepter is a symbol of royal authority, and a “scepter’d isle” is an unforgettable image of a sovereign England owing allegiance to no outsider. In this year marking the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare’s death, his language clearly still manages to capture something essential about the way the people of Great Britain, and especially the English, view themselves.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Foreign Policy Magazine

Foreign Policy Magazine1 min read
Be A Part Of The Inner Circle.
Focus on the journalism on ForeignPolicy.com — and nothing else. Read exclusive Q&A’s driving deeper into the biggest headlines. Access curated reading lists on specific geopolitical topics. Get a free gift subscription to share with anyone you choos
Foreign Policy Magazine8 min readInternational Relations
What South Africa Really Won at the ICJ
For those with long memories, the seed of South Africa’s case against Israel—accusing it of genocidal acts in the Gaza Strip—might be traced to a spring day nearly 50 years ago. On April 9, 1976, South Africa’s white supremacist prime minister, Balth
Foreign Policy Magazine6 min readWorld
The End of Prosperity in Israel
No one can say with complete confidence what the long-term effects of the Gaza war and its auxiliary conflicts in the West Bank and on the border with Lebanon will be for Israel. But even today, it is safe to assume that the war marks the end of a 20

Related Books & Audiobooks