How are you this fine evening?
Are you sitting on the veranda, a soft, warm breeze encouraging you to watch the stars come out? Are you cuddled under a soft, velvety throw, your features softened by firelight, as you read your book? Are you dancing and laughing and making love to minds and bodies and future promises?
I am watching the 2009 version of Hamlet with Mel Gibson. Beautiful eyes aside, he has done the Bard proud.
Most people ask, “How can you understand Shakespeare? His words are so flowery!”
Oh, would today’s writing have such flowery.
I have found the longer I listen to Shakespeare the more I understand. At first the words are tilted and gilded and wraped around each other with magnificent curliques.
But the more you listen, the richer the text becomes. If the actor, the actress, truly understand exactly what William was saying, they become one with the character. And their oneness transcends all language.
I suppose you could say the same with any good writer, with any good actor. Some leave the words back in the book; Other take the beauty, the harmony, of the written word and transcend both worlds.
The purpose of this evening blog is to encourage those of you who use your words to use your words. Don’t just jot down the first rhetoric that comes to mind. Get into your characters. Feel their pain, their confusion, their undying love. And speak as if you were them.
Take a good read or watch a good video of Shakespeare. Know he is of another time, another world, another language. But learn how he says so much with such curly and sweetly scented words. And then take to heart what you learn and make it part of your writing. Perhaps you are not Mel Gibson speaking Hamlet, but you are a gifted muse speaking your own words.
Who knows — maybe one day they will make a movie out of your words!
You are so right. I only started “getting into” the Bard maybe 10-15 years ago. I never studied him in school, and there was no reason to read or listen to his words. Once I had a taste, though….it opened a whole new world to me.
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Really loved your words there. So true.!
And I agree with you: the more we listen/read Shakespeare, the more we get it, and understand it.
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Thank you so much. I was writing the blog as I was watching Hamlet, and it just sounded like music to me.
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You are so right…and I am hoping to read the beauty of your words soon Now that you have a totally different life schedule….
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I know…there is something melodic about the cadence of his words. Am so glad you agree!
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Best description ever of the elusive quality of Shakespeare’s language!
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Glad to see the Goddess is back and relaxed. Your last blog had me worried. Not really, we all have to let off a bit of steam sometimes. Yes, we all need to use the language we are most comfortable with when we write. The beauty of our soul is then reflected in our words.
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Well put! I love the Bard and could listen to his words all day.
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Mine won’t be either, but the quality of my efforts will be worth a read!
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Thank you for believing in yourself!
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beautiful advice! thank you
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Not likely that
My words will be
Turned into a stage
or a screen script,
But if they speak
To one other,
They are worth
Putting on paper
Or the net
Yours speak to me.
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