Saturday, July 11, 2026

WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE -3

 WILLIAM  SHAKESPEARE -3

Perhaps not being seized of the intricacies of Shakespeare –the playwright, some of our blog-viewer friends readily acknowledged Shakespeare’s simplicity over that of Milton. In my little understanding, any poet /playwright can be elegantly simple or eloquently complex as and when the situation warrants. I was duly surprised that simplicity was ascribed to Shakespeare, for, I have been of the belief that Shakespeare can simply complicate or can leave a thing so simple –a forte of his.   I trust, that the day’s compilation would justify my contention about the playwright for his elegance in complexity.  

To climb steep hills requires a slow pace at first

The quote suggests caution in accomplishing a task by proceeding carefully. It is like going up-hill; early efforts should be steady to avoid ‘burn out or exhaustion. 

I am too old to fawn upon a nurse .Too far in years to be a pupil now.

The utterance is a specific expression to explain the situation of a character in the play in Richard II. After a certain age it is too difficult to become an infant and learn new things including a new language. Indirectly, it means that in a new land an alien would be forced into silence [not being able to communicate].

Would I were in an ale house in London

This utterance portrays the disturbed mind of a soldier who is in the thick of war where only hate rules and has just no respect for life. Instead being in this wretched uncertain battlefield, I wish I were in a beer shop in London peacefully sipping a drink

Tis now the very witching time of night, when churchyards yawn and hell itself breathes out contagion to this world.   

This is a very specific situation in ‘Hamlet’. It tries to narrate the harsh horrifying night when evil spirits and witches pervade in the air spreading bad into the world. It tries to suggest link between dark and evil. It is mind’s visualization of society.

Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown   

It is an all-time truth trying to relate power and the agony that goes with. Wearing the crown of authority is indeed an act of misery in that the  power vested in someone, robs the very person of peace and happiness by imposing heavy responsibility and a perpetual sense of insecurity from a range of persons scheming against the authority. Being a King is more than an agony and discomfort.

To Continue ……

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WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE -3

  WILLIAM  SHAKESPEARE -3 Perhaps not being seized of the intricacies of Shakespeare –the playwright, some of our blog-viewer friends read...