Today’s Totally Random
Lines
Dear master, I
can go no further: O, I die for food! Here lie I down, and measure out my grave
Farewell, kind master.
Adam
As You Like It Act II, Scene vi, Line 1
Today’s Totally Random
Lines
Dear master, I
can go no further: O, I die for food! Here lie I down, and measure out my grave
Farewell, kind master.
Adam
As You Like It Act II, Scene vi, Line 1
Today’s Totally Random
Lines
This blue-eyed hag was hither brought with
child,
And here was left by the sailors. Thou, my slave,
As thou report’s thyself, was then her servant;
And, for thou was't a spirit too delicate
To act her earthy and abhorr’d commands,
Refusing her grand hests, she did confine thee,
By help of her more potent ministers
And in her most unmitigated rage,
Into a cloven pine; within which rift
Imprison’d, thou dids’t painfully remain
A dozen years; within which space she died,
And left thee there; where thou first bent thy
groans
As fast at mill-wheels strike. Then was this
island--
Save for the son that she did litter here,
A freckled whelp hag-born-- not honour’d with
A human shape.
Prospero
The Tempest Act I, Scene ii, Line 274
Hest is the only word
in there I am completely unfamiliar with (and I’ve read this play many times). MW has it though: Command, Precept. It’s listed as
archaic; so I’ll give you that.
Nonetheless, it is all in all a quite
understandable passage. Wouldn’t you agree?
Just in case you didn’t know, this is Prospero talking to Ariel and recounting to him (her? them?) what Ariel had told Prospero at an earlier date. It’s the story of how when Prospero first came to the island, he found Ariel trapped inside a tree where the hag witch Sycorax had left him.
I’m not sure why I decided to type out the whole
passage. Today’s Totally Random Line was Refusing her grand hests, she did
confine thee. Now that’s in the
middle of a long sentence that takes up a good deal of the passage, so I decided
to just give you the whole thing.
And there you go.
Today’s Totally Random
Lines
Oh how her eyes
and tears did lend and borrow!
Her eye seen in the tears, tears in the eyes;
Both crystals,
where they view’d each other’s sorrow,--
Sorrow that
friendly sighs sought still to dry;
But like a stormy day, now wind, now rain,
Sighs dry her cheeks, tears make them wet again.
Narrator
Venus and Adonis Line 966
It’s funny that I ended
my last post with Your eyes my rest easy, and now today’s starts with her eyes
and tears. And yesterday we had balls bounding and today just eyeballs.
Anyway, today’s lines are simply a description of one crying. It is a rather original way to describe someone crying, and of course the language is superb: it is Will, after all. I suppose, though, that someone else could have come up with this idea: teardrops and eyeballs as similar crystals; wind and rain vs sighs and tears.
I’ve never seen this way of talking about crying before, but what does that count for? There's an awful, awful lot that I've never seen.
Today’s Totally Random
Lines
Why, these
balls bound; there’s noise in it.—
‘Tis hard:
A young man
married is a man that’s marr’d:
Therefore,
away, and leave her; bravely go:
The king has
done you wrong; hush, ‘tis so.
Parolles
All’s Well That Ends Well Act III, Scene ii, Line 113
Okay, Bertram is telling his buddy Parolles that the king has just forced him, Bertram, to marry a woman he had no desire to marry; so he’s decided to run off to the wars immediately without consummating the marriage.
Today’s lines are Parolles scene-ending,
concluding comments.
The first of these four lines is figurative
speech, assessing the situation as a whole. The last three lines are pretty
easy to understand, so let’s take a look at that first line.
My dad used to say, that’s the way the cookie
crumbles. I think Parolles’s statement may not be too far from that. The
balls bounding is the events transpiring. The noise is the negative aspect of
the events, and hard is hard.
So once again we are given a phrase to use. When
we, or someone we know, is faced with a somewhat difficult situation we can say
These balls bound; there’s noise in it.— ‘Tis hard.
And that, of course will get you the obligatory
eye-roll. Yes, it certainly will. No worries though: the odds of me remembering this
line to use are pretty remote. Your eyes may rest easy.
Today’s Totally Random
Lines
Your wrongs do
set a scandal on my sex:
We cannot fight
for love, as men may do;
We should be
woo’d, and were not made to woo.
Helena
A Midsummer Night’s Dream Act II, Scene i, Line 241
This is Helena talking to Demetrius, pleading with him to love her. He has told her repeatedly that he wants nothing to do with her, but she won’t listen.
I’m not sure what to say
about Today's Line, so perhaps I'll just say nothing.
Today’s Totally Random
Lines
So-ho, so-ho!
Launce
Two Gentlemen of Verona Act III, Scene i, Line 190
Yes, that’s Today’s Totally Random Line, So-ho, so-ho! Proteus and Launce enter, the former tells the latter to go and seek out Valentine, and the latter exclaims So-ho, so-ho. I imagine seeing Launce pointing as he says this line, since Valentine is already on stage having just finished a short soliloquy. So-ho, so-ho, there he is!
So-ho, so-ho is nothing more than an expression, an exclamation. I
wonder if there’s any chance I’ll remember this one so that I can use it
sometime. That would take some serious effort. So-ho, so-ho. I’m
repeating it here in an attempt to ingrain into my memory. Perhaps I could sing
it. So-ho, so-ho, it’s off to work we go.
I
don’t think I could use Hi-ho as an exclamation. Or could I?
Realistically, you can use just about anything as an exclamation.
Gutterspouts, gutterspouts! There he is!
See, that works.
So-ho, gutterspouts!
Today’s Totally Random Lines Her voice is stopt, her joints forget to bow; Her eyes are mad that they have wept till now. ...