Keep an eye out for dragons.
Sure will. Here in Mallorca it is celebrated with a big book festival.
Keep an eye out for dragons.
it was a bit of a bbc and twitter cock up as i understand. Sledge died in April 2015. I think samuel l jackson posted something like Prince joining Percy Sledge and other celebs post OMG Percy Sledge has died too, terrible 2016 so far.Must be his anniversary then!
It is also the anniversary of the passing of one of the Greatest Britons that ever lived today. IMO it would be more realistic to rename the 23rd of April "William Shakespeare Day" and celebrate with lots of festivals and plays up and down the country in honour of the Bard!
Excellent article in The Guardian yesterday arguing that the greatest piece of good fortune to befall the English was to share a mother tongue with Shakespeare. The Russians have Tolstoy, the Spanish have Cervantes, but the English really hit the jackpot with the greatest playwright, philosopher and poet of them all.
it was a bit of a bbc and twitter cock up as i understand. Sledge died in April 2015. I think samuel l jackson posted something like Prince joining Percy Sledge and other celebs post OMG Percy Sledge has died too, terrible 2016 so far.
My fav comebacks were those that tweeted -People tweeting 'Percy Sledge has died today too' and you're thinking 'You liked him that much that you didn't notice he died in 2015' and Percy Sledge has died two years in a row. Fingers crossed that 2017 is a better year for him and Percy Sledge - dying in 2015 is unlucky but doing it again in 2016? That's just reckless! Be more careful!
social media is a bizarre thing
I also think Shakespeare was fortunate to have such a rich language to write in. I am willing to be corrected (because I have asked people before and no one has ever been able to tell me), but does any other language have so many words for the same thing with subtle nuances.....a gift for poets.Excellent article in The Guardian yesterday arguing that the greatest piece of good fortune to befall the English was to share a mother tongue with Shakespeare. The Russians have Tolstoy, the Spanish have Cervantes, but the English really hit the jackpot with the greatest playwright, philosopher and poet of them all.
That's true, but Shakespeare probably has the most recorded neologisms (newly made-up words) of any writer in the English language. Can't recall the exact number, but it's well into the hundreds, so if anyone has enriched the English language more than the Swan of Avon, I'd like to know who they are!I also think Shakespeare was fortunate to have such a rich language to write in. I am willing to be corrected (because I have asked people before and no one has ever been able to tell me), but does any other language have so many words for the same thing with subtle nuances.....a gift for poets.
Be nice if he was still here to write a chant for some of our players.That's true, but Shakespeare probably has the most recorded neologisms (newly made-up words) of any writer in the English language. Can't recall the exact number, but it's well into the hundreds, so if anyone has enriched the English language more than the Swan of Avon, I'd like to know who they are!
He wrote a couple for Toby Alderweireld!Be nice if he was still here to write a chant for some of our players.![]()
That's true, but Shakespeare probably has the most recorded neologisms (newly made-up words) of any writer in the English language. Can't recall the exact number, but it's well into the hundreds, so if anyone has enriched the English language more than the Swan of Avon, I'd like to know who they are!
Just watched Jungle Book. Brilliant film.
Yes, I've seen a few trailers for that latest adaptation and it does look quite astounding.
On another film subject, and something along the lines of a Marcus Brigstocke I've Never Seen Star Wars event, I've watched a couple of James Bond films that I'd never seen before. Bear in mind that I've never been a great fan of James Bond films, so when I say that I was quite surprised to find that On Her Majesty's Secret Service was nothing like as bad as I thought it was going to be, and George Lazenby was also nothing like as bad as he is painted. [he's not good, but he's not alone in that amongst Bond actors]. In fact, I thought OHMSS was quite amusing in places and Lazenby could do the physical stuff as well as, if not better than all the others, with the possible exception of Daniel Craig.
The other Bond film I watched for the first time, which was last night incidentally, was Diamonds Are Forever, and I can safely say that I've watched only a handful of worse films in my life. Crikey, it was ****. No wonder Connery didn't want to do any more. He was terrible in it and the general acting standard was horrendous, plus the production standard was woeful. Nearly all TV productions today would be done with greater care and quality.
I just watched the latest Star Wars again and enjoyed it as much as I did the first time. I'm just a big kid at heart.