Shakespeare on the Pleasure of Cursing (in Winter)

Well could I curse away a winter's night though standing naked on a mountain top“Well could I curse away a winter’s night,
Though standing naked on a mountain top,
Where biting cold would never let grass grow,
And think it but a minute spent in sport”

(King Henry VI part 2, act 3, sc. 2)

Comments. In this, our post-Orwellian world, officially informed by refined state propaganda – where the art of censorship by omission has reached perfection, where a system of international murder is called “dispositive matrix”, where social crimes are sanitized by the name of “austerity”, where “humanitarian intervention” is a wretched euphemism for wholesale murder and elimination of regimes unpleasing to the empire, where truth telling is a threat (see Bradley Manning and Julian Assange), where the slavery of the mind has replaced the slavery of old ( see previous blog), where the military has spent 4.5 billion $ in the last 4 years to sell the public on lies, on “perpetual war” etc. etc. ….. many will share Suffolk’s ideas, as they watch impotent the progress of evil on a world scale.

Tips for Use.  General feeling shared by many when witnessing impotent the misdeed, the crimes and the attempts of the Petrochemical-Pharmaceutical-Military-Industrial-Transnational-Corporate-Fascist-Elite-Sons of Bitches to normalize the unthinkable

If you like this website why not subscribe (see last menu item to the right)? You will get automatically any new blog as well as any other information and novelty that will be forthcoming. And check the Shakespeare book too.

In the play.  The Duke of Suffolk to Queen Margaret on his wish to curse the enemies that had him banished.

Site for Image.  http://www.deviantart.com/morelikethis/324647944

This entry was posted in After Dinner Quotes, Best Shakespeare Quotes, Elegant Shakespearean Quotes, Insults Shakespeare-style, Philosophical, Psychological & Historical Considerations, Shakespeare in Politics, Shakespeare Invocations, Shakespeare on Mass Psychology and Group Behavior and tagged , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *