I invite people to submit their favourite quotes and to discuss which novels, plays, poems they most like, and why.
Here's one I find hugely amusing and my students always laughed heartily when I read it to them (with all the passion of an acted performance):
It comes from chapter 31 in "Great Expectations" (Dickens) when Pip visits Mr. Wopsle at the theatre in London when Wopsle plays Hamlet in a pathetic amateur production. This is but one of the many, many gems recounting the early scenes in the play when the ghost of Hamlet's father appears:
"The late king of the country not only appeared to have been troubled with a cough at the time of his decease, but to have taken it with him to the tomb, and to have brought it back. The royal phantom also carried a ghostly manuscript round its truncheon, to which it had the appearance of occasionally referring, and that, too, with an air of anxiety and a tendency to lose the place of reference which were suggestive of a state of mortality!"
PS: I just realized that "written literature" is a tautology. Apologies.
Here's one I find hugely amusing and my students always laughed heartily when I read it to them (with all the passion of an acted performance):
It comes from chapter 31 in "Great Expectations" (Dickens) when Pip visits Mr. Wopsle at the theatre in London when Wopsle plays Hamlet in a pathetic amateur production. This is but one of the many, many gems recounting the early scenes in the play when the ghost of Hamlet's father appears:
"The late king of the country not only appeared to have been troubled with a cough at the time of his decease, but to have taken it with him to the tomb, and to have brought it back. The royal phantom also carried a ghostly manuscript round its truncheon, to which it had the appearance of occasionally referring, and that, too, with an air of anxiety and a tendency to lose the place of reference which were suggestive of a state of mortality!"
PS: I just realized that "written literature" is a tautology. Apologies.
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