Wednesday, May 4, 2022

 


Yet will I favour thee in what I can.

 

-Duke of Ephesus

The Comedy of Errors      Act I Scene i, Line 150

The Duke is talking to Aegeon and he’s going to favour Aegeon by allowing him one extra day to live before he executes him. The crime? Aegeon is a stranger in Ephesus, and he’s from Syracuse. Wow! Forget about building a wall, they’ve come up with a significantly more comprehensive solution to deal with people coming in from other places: kill ‘em. One would think that this would be a fairly good deterrent. One would think.

Tuesday, May 3, 2022

 


A pebble.

 

-William Page

The Merry Wives of Windsor      Act IV Scene i, Line 29


Yes, a pebble. That's today's Totally Random line: A pebble. This is obviously said in answer to a question. What was the question? And what is a stone, William? Well that seems like a reasonably good answer. Nope. The answer is lapis. Yah, I didn’t really get much out of this scene either.


I believe this is a stone as opposed to a pebble, the latter being something a bit smaller. I found it in the front yard last week and thought it was worth keeping. 
Lapis is Latin for stone. William's teacher was looking for the Latin word, not another English word that was similar to pebble.


Monday, May 2, 2022

 


First, he commends him to your noble self.

 

-Messenger

King Richard the Third     Act III Scene ii, Line 8

The messenger from Lord Stanley is at Lord Hasting’s door at four in the morning. I was up briefly today at four in the morning. Luckily there were no messengers from Lord Stanley, or anyone else, banging at my door. I went back to sleep.

Sunday, May 1, 2022

 

Most honour’d Cleon, I must needs be gone;

 

-Pericles

Pericles, Prince of Tyre    Act III Scene iii, Line 1


I'm not sure where he needs be gone to, but Pericles is heading out somewhere or the other, and he leaves his baby girl Marina in the care of Cleon, the governor of Tarsus. A scene or two from now we will find Marina fully grown and living in a house of prostitution. So that should give you an idea of how good a job Cleon does taking care of Marina. Well, to be fair, it’s Cleon’s wife Dionyza who ends up being the baddy in this respect, and it’s jealousy that’s the driver.

That’s a pretty interesting name, Dionyza. I used the google and found a young lady with that name who sings. I wonder if her parents were Shakespeareans. If not, how did they come up with that name? Interesting.  

Anyway, here is Dionyza’s song I Told Myself. I thought it was pretty good.

https://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=dionyza&docid=608010414151574667&mid=B18E83AF26D0F8512E2FB18E83AF26D0F8512E2F&view=detail&FORM=VIRE

 

Saturday, April 30, 2022

 


Let us to the great supper: their cheer is the greater that I am subdued.

 

-Don John

Much Ado About Nothing          Act I Scene iii, Line 69

A thought occurred to me reading this: Don John seems to have been taking delight in the planning of misfortune for someone. We’ve seen this in many places with Will: Iago, Edmund, the list goes on. But I must say, this is a notion quite foreign to myself. I guess there are people that are very annoying to me (a certain neighbor comes to mind), and I may have wishes that they’d just go away and get out of my life, but I don’t think I’ve ever taken joy in planning ill fortune for them. And yet, I can think of other people in my life who may do just this.

Hmm, interesting.

 

Do you see these three arborvitae trees? We recently had them planted to increase the buffer between us and the guy on the other side of that white fence. Yes, he's annoying, but I don't sit around plotting his demise. I'd just prefer that he moved away. In the meantime - trees.  

Friday, April 29, 2022

 


You heavens, give me that patience, patience I need!

 -Lear

King Lear                       Act II Scene iV, Line 272


It seems to me that we’ve all used this line, or a version of it, at some time or another. I certainly know that I have. It also seems to me, now that I think of it, that much of the time this line is used it is in reference to the patience needed with other people, not with things. Or perhaps I’m not correct about that. In any event, with these lines Lear is looking for the patience he needs for dealing with people: specifically his two daughters.

I can’t possibly imagine having my own kids turn against me. I can remember, let alone imagine, needing patience to deal with them, but not because they were turning against me. I would certainly be looking, as Lear is, to the heavens for help if that happened.

Anyway, I still find myself looking for patience a lot, and a lot of the time it’s patience needed dealing with people. People can be tough to deal with, can't they?


Here is someone I hardly, if ever, needed patience with. Of course, she was not a people.


Thursday, April 28, 2022

 


She embraces him.

 

-Polixenes

The Winter’s Tale                  Act V Scene iii, Line 111

Today’s line sounds more like a stage direction than a line. Nonetheless, it is today’s Totally Random line. And a nice short one it is. She embraces him: subject, verb, and object. It doesn’t get all that much simpler than that. In fact, a bit unshakespearean if you don’t mind my saying. She embraces him. I’m not even sure why we have this line. Certainly, the audience can see that she is embracing him. Soooooo, what’s with this line?

Anyone? See, this is the part where I really wish I had some people reading this blog who might give some thoughts on this. Oh well. Nobody reads it: subject, verb, and object.


Here we have a picture of today's blogpost readers; who, coincidentally, is also today's blogpost writer.




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