FoxTrot Classics by Bill Amend for November 04, 2021

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    sirbadger  about 3 years ago

    It once took me 2 hours to read 6 pages in an advanced math book. I wanted to understand what I was reading.

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    Templo S.U.D.  about 3 years ago

    Imagine Peter Otterloop, Jr. reading William Shakespeare at the same pace he reads Little Neuro comics.

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    Robin Harwood  about 3 years ago

    Why do people make such a big deal of reading Shakespeare? The language is a bit old fashioned, and a bit convoluted at times, but usually it’s clear enough. When it isn’t, it just needs a bit of mental effort to work it out.

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    Randallw  about 3 years ago

    Forsooth, me thinks the lady doth protest too much.

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    dflak  about 3 years ago

    I hated being forced t o read the classics in high school. I did not have the necessary life experience to appreciate them.

    I get it, forcing kids to read a variety of literature is like forcing them to eat vegetables: you don’t know what you like or don’t like until you try it.

    I never did get into Shakespeare which puts me at a distinct disadvantage when playing along with Jeopardy. That and my general lack of knowledge in opera … and my disinterest in movies and TV and celebrities or British royalty or sports starts or pop culture …

    Come to think of it, I don’t know why I enjoy watching Jeopardy at all.

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    LOLBeth  about 3 years ago

    That’s not Shakespeare. That’s James Joyce.

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    Dkram  about 3 years ago

    When I was in grade school I read “Julius Caesar”, thought I could wright a book report (right) Got a B just for reading the thing.

    \\//_

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    Timothy Madigan Premium Member about 3 years ago

    it’s probably:

    “Two households, both alike in dignity,

    In fair Verona, where we lay our scene,From ancient grudge break to new mutiny,Where civil blood makes civil hands unclean.

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    rpmurray  about 3 years ago

    She could claim to have Autism or ADHD. That lets you get away with a lot of crap.

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    theincrediblebulk  about 3 years ago

    The only way to truly read Shakespeare is aloud. Too much of any play is lost by simply reading it, like a novel.

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    ksu71  about 3 years ago

    I’ve read a couple but much prefer a movie version. Preferably set in period and with closed captioning.

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    Lee26 Premium Member about 3 years ago

    Thank goodness in high school I only had to read one Shakespeare book. Romeo and the Twelve Shrews (or something like that☺️). It was readable but unfunny. I never got the allure or why we HAD to read it.

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    kab2rb  about 3 years ago

    I never understood Shakespeare.

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    John9  about 3 years ago

    I took Shakespeare in High School and I liked it, of course it was so long ago it was “current events”. (haha)

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    BiathlonNut  about 3 years ago

    … To die, to sleep,To sleep, perchance to Dream; aye, there’s the rub,For in that sleep of death, what dreams may come,When we have shuffled off this mortal coil,Must give us pause. …

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    kauri44  about 3 years ago

    I always found that the footnotes, while important to comprehension (as what you think words and phrases mean in a modern context may be very different in Elizabethan times), are what slowed down reading the plays.

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    schaefer jim  about 3 years ago

    Yeah, Shakespeare was tough reading , but when done, you felt like getting a second book. Now poem or poetry was torture.

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    KEA  about 3 years ago

    Shakespeare’s not that bad… try a novel by Thomas Hardy or E. R. Eddison

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    hmofo813 Premium Member about 3 years ago

    Shakespeare didn’t write especially long sentences as a rule, nor very hard ones to understand. I think the gag is that she’s stupid. It’s Hamlet; the first sentence is “Who’s there?”

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