Today’s Totally Random
Lines
My
father’s death,--
Richard
King Richard the Third Act IV, Scene iv, Line 376
Yes, line 376. We’re deep into this act and I’m not
sure exactly what’s happened so far. I do know that right here Richard is
talking to Elizabeth, the widow of Richard’s brother, Edward IV. Richard is
trying to tell Elizabeth something (I’m not sure what) and he’s trying to swear
to her it’s the truth, but everything he tries to swear on she discredits.
If something thou wouldst swear to be believed,
Swear, then, by
something thou hast not wrong’d.
Now, by the world,-
‘Tis full of thy foul wrongs.
My father’s death,-
Thy life hath that dishonour’d.
Then, by myself,-
Thy self is self-misused.
Why, then, by God,-
God’s wrong is most of all.
And then she goes on to
explain how swearing by God is, for Richard, as useless as all the other things
he would swear on. Richard should just give it up here, but of course, he doesn’t.
After all that, he somehow still convinces Elizabeth to let him marry her
daughter.
Go figure.
2 comments:
Is Eskimo a bad word??
Why haven't you read all the Shakespeare plays and sonnets yet? Could you not make your way through the whole "Shakespeare's Complete Works" volume?
I think eskimo has some negative connotation, not sure what it is.
I have not tried to read through it all. If you haven't noticed, I'm going randomly through it.
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