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Quoting Shakespeare

Posted: 04/23/2012 7:30 am

To celebrate Shakespeare's birthday, we're featuring some of our favorite archival pieces about his life and work. This one was first published in July 2005. Happy Birthday, Bill!

After the horrors of this week, we could all use a little weekend palate cleanser. And who better to provide this Saturday summer sorbet than Britain's own immortal Bard, a writer who dealt with all the darkness of the human soul but also brilliantly celebrated the light and tickled our fancy?

The following bit of Shakespearean amusement was concocted by my great friend Bernard Levin, who passed away last year. It was recited to perfection by Michael York at a dinner in Aspen given by Lynda and Stewart Resnick in honor of all the speakers at the Aspen Institute's Ideas Festival. After York's rendition, the party erupted with requests (including one from Arthur Schlesinger) for copies of what York had just read. So instead of running out to Kinko's, I've decided to post it here so that he -- and all of you -- can have it to download, print out, e-mail, link to... and enjoy.

If you cannot understand my argument, and declare 'It's Greek to me',
you are quoting Shakespeare;
if you claim to be more sinned against than sinning,
you are quoting Shakespeare;
if you recall your salad days,
you are quoting Shakespeare;
if you act more in sorrow than in anger,
if your wish is father to the thought,
if your lost property has vanished into thin air,
you are quoting Shakespeare;
if you have ever refused to budge an inch or suffered from green-eyed jealousy,
if you have played fast and loose,
if you have been tongue-tied,
a tower of strength,
hoodwinked or in a pickle,
if you have knitted your brows,
made a virtue of necessity,
insisted on fair play,
slept not one wink,
stood on ceremony,
danced attendance (on your lord and master),
laughed yourself into stitches,
had short shrift, cold comfort or too much of a good thing,
if you have seen better days or lived in a fool's paradise --
why, be that as it may, the more fool you, for it is a foregone conclusion that you are (as good luck would have it) quoting Shakespeare;
if you think it is early days and clear out bag and baggage,
if you think it is high time and that that is the long and short of it,
if you believe that the game is up and that truth will out even if it involves your own flesh and blood,
if you lie low till the crack of doom because you suspect foul play,
if you have your teeth set on edge (at one fell swoop) without rhyme or reason,
then -- to give the devil his due -- if the truth were known (for surely you have a tongue in your head) you are quoting Shakespeare;
even if you bid me good riddance and send me packing,
if you wish I was dead as a doornail,
if you think I am an eyesore,
a laughing stock,
the devil incarnate,
a stony-hearted villain,
bloody-minded or a blinking idiot,
then -- by Jove!
O Lord!
Tut, tut!
For goodness' sake!
What the dickens!
But me no buts --
it is all one to me, for you are quoting Shakespeare.
 
 
 
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09:59 PM on 04/29/2012
When you use the word "the" you're quoting Shakespeare.
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08:52 PM on 04/29/2012
Enlightening and amusing; thanks for the smile.
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Anonmouse33
The GOP, separating mind and state since 1968.
08:27 PM on 04/29/2012
we're all plagiarists. ...isn't, "baby, my cash money," just king leer?
08:12 PM on 04/29/2012
As some have pointed out, some of these gems predate Shakespeare.
"If you have your teeth set on edge" is from Jeremiah 31:30.

But every one shall die for his own iniquity: every man that eateth the sour grape, his teeth shall be set on edge. -King James Bible (Cambridge Ed.)
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playflute2
flootz
03:31 PM on 04/29/2012
Delightful. I would have loved to have heard Michael York reading it. :)
iflew
Pro Publiae Bonae
02:18 PM on 04/29/2012
Shakey's Riddle, "What goes about on four when young, on two when an adult, and three in old age?". His answer was "Man."

When is a 'foot' a 'game'?
Art. Doyle's Sherlock Holmes: "The game's afoot.". Fits the election, if the shoe fits. Ach Foo!
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Stephen D. Winick
01:13 PM on 04/29/2012
Shakespeare was brilliant, but his influence is often overstated. He did not coin many of these phrases. To wit: "It's Greek to me" was a proverbial phrase in both English and French, and seems to derive from Medieval Latin. Shakespeare may have been quoting it from Gascoigne's "The Supposes," but it was simply part of the oral tradition in his time. Within twenty years of Shakespeare’s play, ā€œit was heathen (i.e. ancient) Greek to meā€ was the common form of the proverb, showing that it probably didn’t become popular through Shakespeare, either. The ā€œheathen Greekā€ form was used in the first English translation of Don Quixote and in other prominent works. Another example is ā€œthe long and the short of it.ā€ Shakespeare did not even say this; he said ā€œthe brief and the longā€ once and ā€œthe short and the longā€ once. This too was a common proverbial phrase in his time, going back at least to the fourteenth century.

ā€œGive the devil his dueā€ was a proverb in Shakespeare’s day, and he even says so: ā€œHe was never yet a breaker of proverbs: he will give the Devil his due.ā€ ā€œLaughing stockā€ was common phrase in his day, and ā€œeyesoreā€ predates him, as does ā€œmy own flesh and blood.ā€ ā€œRhyme nor reason,ā€ ā€œdead as a doornail,ā€ ā€œbloody mindedā€ ā€œwhat the dickens,ā€ ā€œit is all one,ā€ and ā€œlie lowā€ all predate him, some by centuries. People who use these phrases now are quoting folklore, not Shakespeare.
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Mark Knudsen
01:08 PM on 04/29/2012
Like the Bible...becareful what you quote on what occupation ..the old viking
11:07 AM on 04/29/2012
"Reason not the need!".....Lear
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Ballu12b
Parodist. Pinching the pompous.
11:06 AM on 04/29/2012
Thank you, Arianna, Bernard and Bill. Got my copy. Will (for those who could use it), spread it around.
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hornedcog
Tax Tea Now!
10:10 AM on 04/29/2012
Led me to "minced oaths".
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fjpoblam
Āædid I say something?
10:03 AM on 04/29/2012
He was the Shakespeare of his time. (Oops. Did I say something?)
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Mac Howard
Thank god we got convicts, you got the puritans
12:27 AM on 04/29/2012
Can't remember the exact quote but one that I always felt was good advice when a young man looking for Dutch courage (the bard, I think) to chat up a girl in a pub was that alcohol "heightens desire but reduces performance".

Sounds to me like Falstaff but maybe someone knows the exact quote and source.
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Valksy
civis mundi sum
09:17 AM on 04/29/2012
The Scottish play

I believe it was an ancillary color character. But am on my phone and can't check.
11:47 AM on 04/29/2012
It's the porter in MacBeth (Act II, scene iii):

Lechery, sir, it provokes, and unprovokes;
it provokes the desire, but it takes
away the performance: therefore, much drink
may be said to be an equivocator with lechery:
it makes him, and it mars him; it sets
him on, and it takes him off; it persuades him,
and disheartens him; makes him stand to, and
not stand to; in conclusion, equivocates him
in a sleep, and, giving him the lie, leaves him.
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Mac Howard
Thank god we got convicts, you got the puritans
07:41 PM on 04/29/2012
Thanks Maggie and Valksy. You learn something every day on huffpost :)

What is shameful though is I studied Macbeth at school - but is a v_e_r_y long time ago :rolleyes:
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edejan
01:19 AM on 04/25/2012
I'm always amazed at the number of Shakespeare's quotations still used today - some 300 to 400 years or so after he wrote them. I'm amazed at the number of words he created. I'm still amazed that one man could create so many works of such remarkable depth so full of the knowledge of the complex array of human emotions, of human motivations and of human suffering. It makes me wonder if really was only one man or if he was some superhuman from the future. I'm not a scholar and only studied the basic English courses in college, but dang....he is a total mystery to me no matter how much I hear him "explained."
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pattyrenee
09:34 PM on 04/23/2012
Wow, who knew?!