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That's my wedding anniversary...Better forth..??
May the forth be with you..!!
The fourth is strong with this one...That's my wedding anniversary.
Shakespeare wrote in a system of scansion, a method or practice of determining, graphically, of representing the metrical pattern of a line of verse. When Shakespeare doesn't want the scansion to come out right, he leaves a blank -- indicating a pause -- in the line. Most directors hate pauses, but sometimes Shakespeare wrote them in.
Most actors know that Shakespeare usually wrote iambic pentameter, or five iambic feet per line. When he varies from that standard, he's trying to get your attention. In this example from Othello, Brabantio, Desdemona's Father, complains about his daughter's elopement (Act 1, Scene 3
"I had rather to adopt a child than get it.
Come hither, Moor.
I here do give thee that with all my heart."
You can see that the middle line is much shorter than the others -- two iambic feet instead of the usual five. If Shakespearean text were music, we could say he has written in a pause for Brabantio. The rhythm of the iambic pentameter goes on, but Brabantio has no words to put on top of it, why not?
Othello must respond to Brabantio's summons and cross the stage to him. Perhaps only when Brabantio has taken the hands of Othello and Desdemona in his does he continue. And Shakespeare wants the Moor to cross the stage in scary silence. We don't know what Brabantio will do when Othello is within reach; he might pull out a fine Venetian dagger and stab his his daughter's new husband to death. As a Father, he's always been overly protective.
There you go, nothing philosophical about The Bard, he uses the pause to great effect.
Twain knew the value of silence as a tool, among others he is quoted as saying: "Better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to speak and to remove all doubt." Sound advice for some of the high profile Twitterers. There are those that argue that the remaining silent quote is really credited to President Lincoln, but in fact you can find it almost verbatim in the bible. Look up Proverbs 17:28. "Even a fool is thought wise if he keeps silent, and discerning if he holds his tongue."Or as Mark Twain put it a little more succinctly; " The right word may be effective but no word was ever as effective as a rightly timed pause."
Shakespeare wrote in a system of scansion, a method or practice of determining, graphically, of representing the metrical pattern of a line of verse. When Shakespeare doesn't want the scansion to come out right, he leaves a blank -- indicating a pause -- in the line.
Most actors know that Shakespeare usually wrote iambic pentameter, or five iambic feet per line. When he varies from that standard, he's trying to get your attention.
There you go, nothing philosophical about The Bard, he uses the pause to great effect.