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| Yes | 24% | 298 votes | Total: 1225 votes | |
| No | 76% | 927 votes |
To me, Shakespeare was always incomprehensible. Yes, that is not the best opening sentence for one writing to the "No." side.
Why were his works indecipherable? Or more pointedly, why were they indecipherable to me? Because, to get right to the point, I was lazy. First off the introduction to Shakespeare was in high school, not always the best time to introduce hard work, and a hard work, to a 'regular' student.
"Okay class, I want you to open your book to page 25 where we will find one of the most well known Shakespeare speeches, from Hamlet. Act 1, scene 2.
I looked down at the page. I saw words, some not in an English I knew and in addition, it was not prose but poetry. It was really depressing to boot. Three strikes and you are out!
"...How weary, stale, flat and unprofitable Seem to me all the uses of this world! Fie on't, ah, fie, 'tis an unweeded garden That grows to seed. Things rank and gross in nature Possess it merely. That it should come to this.
An unweeded garden? I thought he was talking about how depressed he was, how did that turn into talking about weeds and grossness? And not good gross, like teenagers love but garbage type gross. Ick.
And the comedies? Much Ado About Nothing was much ado about 'huh?'.
"BENEDICK: This can be no trick. The conference was sadly borne; they have the truth of this from Hero; they seem to pity the lady. It seems her affections have their full bent. Love me? Why, it must be requited. I hear how I am censured. They say I will bear myself proudly if I perceive the love come from her. They say too that she will rather die than give any sign of affection." That is supposed to be funny?
Flash forward, not necessarily many years later. Life hands you more experiences. Life and school educates and informs to a level of comprehension way beyond that of a teenager. The words now make sense. The sentiment is understood at a much more visceral level. .
Shakespeare writes about love, life, passion. He gives the reader the lows of despair, the highs of elation. His words are the actions of the soap opera, the romance novel, real life. He is not a writer you can throw at young people without explanation of a kind they can understand. His writings are to an audience of years and experience far advanced from that of most school age readers. He is not a writer you can expose to a young class of students without advance preparation.
"Kids, wait until you read this play, these words. It may be different than what you know and yet it is not much different than when you read Harry Potter or see Star Wars. Even though some of the words are new to you and the foreground different than real life, the background truths are about a life that we all know."
Give a reader the context and an explanation and see how much more accessible and understandable the writings of this most prolific and extravagant writer becomes.
Learn more about this author, Carol Levy.
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by Lyman Stone
Shakespeare is undoubtedly one of the finest authors ever to have been produced in any language. However, his work must
Some of Shakespeare's writing does border on being incomprehensible, but I believe this is because it was never meant to
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