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What is your favourite Shakespeare quote?

(60 Posts)
Alea Fri 05-Feb-16 09:30:18

Unashamedly cribbed from Twitter this morning

"My crown is in my heart, not on my head..." Henry VI, Part 3

What is your favourite Shakespeare quote?

Irenelily Sun 07-Feb-16 19:53:55

Love all the quotes!
As a teenager in the throes of unrequited love - "what shall Cordelia do, love and be silent" was meaningful! I also felt sad that her father, King Lear didn't understand his three daughters very well!
The other quote that I have always liked is from Julius Caesar " the fault, dear Brutus, lies not in our stars, but in ourselves, that we are underlings" a reminder that we mustn't give up but with effort can shape our lives. Thanks to a really good English teacher that I really enjoyed the plays we read - but never found them as entertaining to read on my own!

Bez1989 Sun 07-Feb-16 18:58:54

"To thine own self be true"
from Hamlet

Jalima Sun 07-Feb-16 15:47:25

We are all 'merely players' entropy!

entropy Sun 07-Feb-16 15:05:20

Hist! Thou black and midnight hags. (The Scottish Play)
f allthe world's a stage, where does the audience sit?

Jalima Sun 07-Feb-16 14:44:53

^If music be the food of love play on.
Give me excess of it that, surfeiting,
the appetite may sicken and so die^
Yes, Twelfth Night

Jalima Sun 07-Feb-16 14:39:48

I used one in an answer to Terribull above grin

Don't 'get in a pickle' over it
Never mind, 'All's well that ends well'
wink
www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/news/william-shakespeares-450th-birthday-50-everyday-phrases-that-came-from-the-bard-9275254.html

Jalima Sun 07-Feb-16 14:35:57

You may not understand it LesleyC (and that is a shame, bad teaching I would imagine!) but I would think that you may use many of his quotes in everyday life - so many have entered the English language as they are so apt.

mrsmopp Sun 07-Feb-16 14:34:30

Midsummer Nights Dream, sorry!

mrsmopp Sun 07-Feb-16 14:33:34

I know a bank where the wild thyme blows,
Where oxlips and the nodding violet grows,
Quite over-canopied with luscious woodbine,
With sweet musk-roses and with eglantine.
There sleeps Titania sometime of the night,
Lull'd in these flowers with dances and delight
Oberon, Act 2 Scene 1

librarylady Sun 07-Feb-16 14:12:18

To-morrow, and to-morrow, and to-morrow,
Creeps in this petty pace from day to day,
To the last syllable of recorded time;
And all our yesterdays have lighted fools
The way to dusty death. Out, out, brief candle!
Life's but a walking shadow, a poor player
That struts and frets his hour upon the stage
And then is heard no more. It is a tale
Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury
Signifying nothing

Macbeth - and more or less sums up my philosophy of life

helmacd Sun 07-Feb-16 13:26:57

(thou) 'cream faced loon'
(Macbeth). Not so much for the insult but because it brings back memories of childhood, and my brother teasing me with this and similar jibes. I didn't know it came from Shakespeare at the time - I was around 6 or 7 years old maybe, and he was 10 years older.

annifrance Sun 07-Feb-16 12:50:27

I like Jingle bells quotes. I know I will get yelled at and I know Shakespeare is wonderful and the language unsurpassed but I am TOTALLY ALLERGIC TO SHAKESPEARE!

I went to a one of the top academic schools in England and we had to do a Shakespeare a term for seven years, even if we didn't do A level Eng Lit. I have had it up to here and you would get me near the Globe. Rather stick pins in my eyes.

Although I have occasionally enjoyed a jazzed up version such as a Royal Court production of Twelfth Night, which was my Olevel text. Got on the wrong side of the English teacher when I said I though Olivia was a vapid creature, and of course she was Miss Ps heroine. Also she didn't like when I disagreed with her that it was a tragedy as well as comedy because of Malvolio - got what he deserved to my mind. A few years ago on Friends Reunited someone posted that what Miss P didn't know about courtly love wasn't worth knowing. So useful in the 60s.

Now all shout me down - or is there anyone else out there that feels the same?

LesleyC Sun 07-Feb-16 12:35:06

I've never understood a word of Shakespeare. It was knocked out of me having to learn it at school.

daffydil Sun 07-Feb-16 11:16:18

I used to like this when I was overweight (I'm not now):-

Yon Cassius hath a lean and hungry look
Give me men about me that are fat.

Julius Caesar

BRedhead59 Sun 07-Feb-16 11:07:54

All the world's a stage,
And all the men and women merely players;
They have their exits and their entrances,
And one man in his time plays many parts

I agree with Jalima

Synonymous Sun 07-Feb-16 10:32:53

"Better three hours too soon than a minute too late."

My DM always added "and a lifetime of regret" which was always very sobering. I hasten to say that she was a fun person too. smile

luluaugust Sun 07-Feb-16 10:30:51

If music be the food of love play on. Thinks its Twelfth Night.

wendylou Sun 07-Feb-16 10:22:49

"Daffodils, that come before the swallow dares/And take the winds of March with beauty"

janepearce6 Sun 07-Feb-16 10:00:30

"There is nothing good or bad but thinking makes it so." Sounds like Hamlet but I'm not sure now!

BetsyTrotwood Sun 07-Feb-16 09:52:25

(Of an old woman): "rump-fed runnion".

Tingleydancer Sun 07-Feb-16 09:49:49

There was a star danced and under it I was born

Stansgran Sat 06-Feb-16 20:58:38

So shines a good deed
And it is a naughty world .

Stansgran Sat 06-Feb-16 20:57:11

I was up at the cathedral today and the tea lights and candles were busy. One of the clergy said he couldn't understand why people wanted to light candles so much. I quoted one of my favourites "how far that little candle throws his beams Like a good deed in a naughty world"

Jalima Sat 06-Feb-16 19:41:48

There is a lot more Terribull but that is the nub of it, the quote.

A good one!

TerriBull Sat 06-Feb-16 18:46:53

I think I've left some out that's all I can remember sad