Sunday, October 20, 2019
12 Misunderstood and Misquoted Shakespearean Expressions
12 Misunderstood and Misquoted Shakespearean Expressions 12 Misunderstood and Misquoted Shakespearean Expressions 12 Misunderstood and Misquoted Shakespearean Expressions By Mark Nichol The plays of William Shakespeare provide a wealth of pithy sayings many of which he likely popularized rather than produced himself, though we may still be grateful to him for sharing them. Unfortunately, sometimes the original sense is adulterated by careless usage, so that the eloquent force of the expression is weakened. Here are a dozen of Shakespeareââ¬â¢s phrases with comments about their original wording and meaning: 1. ââ¬Å"At one fell swoopâ⬠This phrase from Macduffââ¬â¢s grief-stricken lamentation about the murder of his family in Macbeth uses the archaic word fell, meaning ââ¬Å"fierce,â⬠to extend the metaphor of the perpetrator (who he calls a ââ¬Å"hell-kiteâ⬠) as a bird of prey. Modern usage is generally more casual and even comical. 2. ââ¬Å"Brave new worldâ⬠This phrase from a speech by Miranda, daughter of the wizard Prospero in The Tempest, naively uses brave in the sense of ââ¬Å"handsomeâ⬠when she first lays eyes on other men. The subtext in Shakespeare is that those she refers to are superficially attractive but substantially deficient in character. The sense is the same in the phrase as it appears in the title of Aldous Huxleyââ¬â¢s dystopian classic. Unfortunately, the dark sarcasm is being dulled by use of the phrase to blithely herald a bright future. 3. ââ¬Å"Foregone conclusionâ⬠From Othello, this phrase means literally something that has already occurred (it has ââ¬Å"gone beforeâ⬠); now, the phrase often refers to a conjectural event. 4. ââ¬Å"Gild the lilyâ⬠This misquotation from King John, which actually reads, ââ¬Å"To gild refined gold, to paint the lily . . . is wasteful and ridiculous excess,â⬠confuses the metaphor, because lilies are white, not gold. 5. ââ¬Å"Lead on, Macduffâ⬠This misquotation from Macbeth, in which the title character baits his nemesis to attack him by saying, ââ¬Å"Lay on, Macduff,â⬠is now a variation of ââ¬Å"After youâ⬠quite a diversion from the original intent. 6. ââ¬Å"The milk of human kindnessâ⬠This metaphor, employed in the service of a heartwarming connotation, would rouse the wrath of Lady Macbeth, whose reference to the virtue in the play named for her husband was contemptuous. 7. ââ¬Å"More honored in the breach than the observanceâ⬠This phrase from Hamlet has been twisted by time to mean an admirable custom that is neglected more often practiced. Shakespeareââ¬â¢s sense was of a deplorable custom that should be halted. The expression immediately follows another well-known but oft-misunderstood phrase: Hamlet refers to himself as one ââ¬Å"to the manner born,â⬠meaning ââ¬Å"brought up to follow the custom,â⬠but some people believe the phrase, when expressed out of context, to be ââ¬Å"to the manor born,â⬠referring to one raised in the opulent surroundings of a manor house. 8. ââ¬Å"Neither rhyme nor reasonâ⬠The modern focus is on the second element of this phrase from The Comedy of Errors, but the intent is to express a lack both of sense and of eloquence. 9. ââ¬Å"Sea changeâ⬠This expression from The Tempest refers to a deadly shift in weather, but now the sense of peril has been replaced by a connotation of significant transformation. 10. ââ¬Å"Third degreeâ⬠Shakespeareââ¬â¢s humorous reference in Twelfth Night to someone ââ¬Å"in the third degree of drinkâ⬠harks to the principle of degrees in natural philosophy, which assigns the third degree to the penultimate level of intensity. The modern sense is of merciless interrogation, though itââ¬â¢s usually employed in a lighthearted tone. 11. ââ¬Å"What the dickensâ⬠Some of those unfamiliar with the origin of this expression The Merry Wives of Windsor assume it has a Victorian provenance and refers to Charles Dickens. But dickens is an Elizabethan euphemism for the devil, and Shakespeare employs it as an oath. 12. ââ¬Å"The worlds mine oysterâ⬠The usual assumption is that one can easily lay the world wide open and extract its contents. But the boast in The Merry Wives of Windsor goes on to say, ââ¬Å"Which I with sword will open,â⬠expressing the partakerââ¬â¢s more active and more violent role. Want to improve your English in five minutes a day? Get a subscription and start receiving our writing tips and exercises daily! Keep learning! Browse the Expressions category, check our popular posts, or choose a related post below:Passed vs PastThe Four Sounds of the Spelling OU45 Idioms with "Roll"
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