Today’s Totally Random Lines
Look, who comes here:
Will
you be chid?
Timon
Timon of Athens
Act I, Scene
i, Line 177
That is to say, will you be scolded. Timon sees Apemantus coming and he’s warning the people that he’s talking to that Apemantus is going to be scolding them all. Though I’m not sure scolding is the right word to describe it. Timon addresses him as gentle Apemantus and the latter responds with
Till
I be gentle, stay thou for thy good morrow;
When thou art Timon’s dog, and these knaves honest.
So he’s not scolding so much as he just being rude and insulting. Or perhaps we should say he’s speaking out in angry or displeased rebuke. That the MW definition of chide/chid. Yeah, that works better.
In any event, Apemantus is the anti-social, anti-people character that Timon
will become by the end of the play. His favorite line is probably one that I
heard my friend Uwe say once: I hate
people.
Unhealthy as that is, I know I feel that way more than just a little bit. Have
you ever heard yourself thinking that? I
hate people. It’s kind of tough not to, at least occasionally. Uwe
and I were driving to dinner once when someone cut us off. I was driving and
Uwe was in the passenger seat. He watched the other car drive away and stated
very simply, very matter-of-fairly, I
hate people. Of course he was really referring to the person that had cut
us off, not all people, but it came out a little bit funny. To be clear, Uwe
was not an Apemantus. In fact, Uwe was a pretty decent fellow.
2 comments:
When it's spelled "chid" is it pronounced "chid" or "chide"?
I do not know.
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