This study explores Shakespeare's representation of various kinds of physical and intellectual
work in plays ranging from Hamlet and King Lear through Antony and Cleopatra Coriolanus and
Timon of Athens to the four late romances King Henry VIII and The Two Noble Kinsmen . Of
special interest is the analysis of Shakespeare's portrayal of birth labor especially with
regard to artistic creation and playwriting in particular. The conflict of idleness versus
arduous work becomes progressively more prominent in Shakespeare's Jacobean plays. Reformation
Protestantism the court of King James and early modern English working conditions provide
contexts for appreciating the contemporary importance of this conflict.