Content tagged with “shakespeare”

There are 7 item(s) tagged with “shakespeare” on this site.

Green-Eyed Monster
Explanation
December 13, 2021
220

“This is a phrase commonly known to mean ‘jealously,’ but I’m having trouble figuring out why it means this. Shakespeare used the phrase at least twice. In Othello : O beware, my lord, of jealousy; It is the green-eyed monster which doth mock the meat it feeds on. In The Merchant of Venice : How all…”

Halycon Days
Explanation
December 16, 2022
210

“This idiom is often used when referring to childhood or youth Halycon is an ancient name for the Kingfisher bird. In ancient times, it was believed the gods had given the bird the power to calm the seas during the time when she laid her eggs. Shakespeare used the phrase as the contemporary idiom in…”

Much Ado About Nothing
Deane’s Library
Book Review
January 3, 2016
228

“Wonderful play. I continue to be amazed at Shakespeare’s ability to write about the human condition, and have those observations be perfectly relevant 400 years later. As with The Merchant of Venice I approached this holistically. I read the play first, which was difficult, then read a…”

Salad Days
Stuff I Looked Up
Explanation
February 22, 2022
126

“ From Shakespeare in Antony and Cleopatra : My salad days, When I was green in judgment, cold in blood, To say as I said then. A salad is green when its fresh. Green implies beginnings or amateurism. ”

Sea Change
Stuff I Looked Up
Explanation
June 19, 2023
124

“ A large change in perspective or circumstances. A gradual transformation. It comes from Shakespeare’s The Tempest where he discusses a death by drowning: Both doth suffer a sea change into something rich and strange ”

The Fault In Our Stars
Stuff I Looked Up
Explanation
September 8, 2021
118

“ This is a line from Act 1, Scene 2 of Shakespeare’s play Julius Caesar : The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, But in ourselves, that we are underlings. Cassius is trying to explain to Brutus that their current lives were not due to fate (‘not in our stars’). ”

The Merchant of Venice
Deane’s Library
Book Review
December 26, 2014
250

“For the record, I didn’t read the raw play, but rather the book ‘The Merchant of Venice’ by Modern Library. This book has the script, a scene-by-scene analysis, and about as much commentary from directors and actors who have staged the play. I supplemented this by watching the 1974 TV special with…”