Insults by Shakespeare

2,300,924 views ・ 2012-05-04

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:00
Translator: Bedirhan Cinar
0
0
7000
00:14
Why do we cringe when we hear "Shakespeare?"
1
14507
2345
00:16
If you ask me, it's usually because of his words.
2
16876
3038
00:19
All those thines and thous and therefores
3
19938
3068
00:23
and wherefore-art-thous can be more than a little annoying.
4
23030
3772
00:26
But you have to wonder, why is he so popular?
5
26826
3472
00:30
Why have his plays been made and remade more than any other playwright?
6
30322
4212
00:35
It's because of his words.
7
35393
1481
00:37
Back in the late 1500s and early 1600s,
8
37712
3033
00:40
that was the best tool that a person had,
9
40769
2759
00:43
and there was a lot to talk about.
10
43552
1977
00:45
However, most of it was pretty depressing.
11
45553
3007
00:48
You know, with the Black Plague and all.
12
48584
2057
00:51
Shakespeare does use a lot of words.
13
51855
2767
00:54
One of his most impressive accomplishments is his use of insults.
14
54646
4222
00:58
They would unify the entire audience;
15
58892
2782
01:01
and no matter where you sat, you could laugh at what was going on onstage.
16
61699
4593
01:06
Words, specifically dialogue in a drama setting,
17
66315
3379
01:09
are used for many different reasons:
18
69718
2258
01:12
to set the mood of the scene,
19
72000
1976
01:14
to give some more atmosphere to the setting,
20
74000
2976
01:17
and to develop relationships between characters.
21
77000
3320
01:20
Insults do this in a very short and sharp way.
22
80995
3713
01:25
Let's first go to "Hamlet."
23
85749
2027
01:27
Right before this dialogue,
24
87800
1668
01:29
Polonius is the father of Ophelia, who is in love with Prince Hamlet.
25
89492
4309
01:34
King Claudius is trying to figure out why Prince Hamlet is acting so crazy
26
94703
4897
01:39
since the king married Prince Hamlet's mother.
27
99624
2629
01:42
Polonius offers to use his daughter to get information from Prince Hamlet.
28
102277
5725
01:48
Then we go into Act II Scene 2.
29
108026
2703
01:50
Polonius: "Do you know me, my lord?"
30
110753
3269
01:54
Hamlet: "Excellent well. You're a fishmonger."
31
114046
4130
01:58
Polonius: "Not I, my lord."
32
118200
2822
02:01
Hamlet: "Then I would you were so honest a man."
33
121046
2941
02:04
Now, even if you did not know what "fishmonger" meant,
34
124916
3121
02:08
you can use some contextual clues.
35
128061
2960
02:11
One: Polonius reacted in a negative way, so it must be bad.
36
131045
4986
02:16
Two: Fish smell bad, so it must be bad.
37
136055
3413
02:19
And three: "monger" just doesn't sound like a good word.
38
139492
4422
02:23
So from not even knowing the meaning,
39
143938
2222
02:26
you're beginning to construct some characterization
40
146184
2792
02:29
of the relationship between Hamlet and Polonius,
41
149000
2976
02:32
which was not good.
42
152000
1976
02:34
But if you dig some more, "fishmonger" means a broker of some type,
43
154000
4499
02:38
and in this setting, would mean like a pimp,
44
158523
3453
02:42
like Polonius is brokering out his daughter for money,
45
162000
3760
02:45
which he is doing for the king's favor.
46
165784
2192
02:48
This allows you to see that Hamlet is not as crazy as he's claiming to be,
47
168799
3761
02:52
and intensifies the animosity between these two characters.
48
172584
4020
02:57
Want another example?
49
177191
1554
02:58
"Romeo and Juliet" has some of the best insults of any of Shakespeare's plays.
50
178769
4899
03:04
It's a play about two gangs,
51
184217
1759
03:06
and the star-crossed lovers that take their own lives.
52
186000
2806
03:08
Well, with any fisticuffs
53
188830
2094
03:10
you know that there is some serious smack talk going on.
54
190948
2828
03:13
And you are not disappointed.
55
193800
1776
03:15
In Act I Scene 1, right from the get-go
56
195600
2376
03:18
we are shown the level of distrust and hatred
57
198000
2622
03:20
the members of the two families, the Capulets and Montagues, meet.
58
200646
4945
03:25
Gregory: "I will frown as I pass by, and let them take it as they list."
59
205615
5361
03:31
Sampson: "Nay, as they dare, I will bite my thumb at them,
60
211000
4389
03:35
which is a disgrace to them, if they bear it."
61
215413
3470
03:38
Enter Abraham and Balthasar.
62
218907
2069
03:41
Abraham: "Do you bite your thumb at us, sir?"
63
221000
3778
03:44
Sampson: "I do bite my thumb, sir."
64
224802
2712
03:47
Abraham: "Do you bite your thumb at us, sir?"
65
227538
3884
03:51
Okay, so how does this development help us understand mood or character?
66
231446
4340
03:55
Well, let's break it down to the insult.
67
235810
2166
03:58
Biting your thumb today may not seem like a big deal,
68
238792
2753
04:01
but Sampson says it is an insult to them.
69
241569
2922
04:04
If they take it so, it must have been one.
70
244515
2461
04:07
This begins to show us the level of animosity
71
247539
2437
04:10
between even the men who work for the two Houses.
72
250000
3346
04:13
And you normally would not do anything to someone
73
253830
2514
04:16
unless you wanted to provoke them into a fight,
74
256368
2331
04:18
which is exactly what's about to happen.
75
258723
2695
04:21
Looking deeper, biting your thumb in the time in which the play was written
76
261865
3987
04:25
is like giving someone the finger today.
77
265876
2518
04:29
A pretty strong feeling comes with that,
78
269058
1928
04:31
so we now are beginning to feel the tension in the scene.
79
271010
2966
04:34
Later on in the scene, Tybalt, from the House of the Capulets,
80
274000
3391
04:37
lays a good one on Benvolio from the House of the Montagues.
81
277415
3561
04:41
Tybalt: "What, art thou drawn among these heartless hinds?
82
281000
5618
04:46
Turn thee, Benvolio, and look upon thy death."
83
286642
3306
04:49
Benvolio: "I do but keep the peace; put up thy sword,
84
289972
4499
04:54
or manage it to part these men with me."
85
294495
2481
04:57
Tybalt: "What, drawn and talk of peace!
86
297000
3099
05:00
I hate the word, as I hate hell, all Montagues, and thee.
87
300123
4468
05:04
Have at thee, coward!"
88
304615
1831
05:07
Okay, heartless hinds.
89
307986
1990
05:10
We know that once again, it's not a good thing.
90
310000
3549
05:13
Both families hate each other, and this is just adding fuel to the fire.
91
313573
4310
05:18
But just how bad is this stinger?
92
318807
1907
05:20
A heartless hind is a coward,
93
320738
1381
05:22
and calling someone that in front of his own men, and the rival family,
94
322143
4721
05:26
means there's going to be a fight.
95
326888
1621
05:29
Tybalt basically calls out Benvolio,
96
329136
1840
05:31
and in order to keep his honor, Benvolio has to fight.
97
331000
3976
05:35
This dialogue gives us a good look
98
335299
1826
05:37
at the characterization between these two characters.
99
337149
2750
05:39
Tybalt thinks that the Montagues are nothing but cowardly dogs,
100
339923
3479
05:43
and has no respect for them.
101
343426
1928
05:45
Once again, adding dramatic tension to the scene.
102
345378
3503
05:48
Okay, now here's a spoiler alert.
103
348905
1992
05:50
Tybalt's hotheadedness and severe hatred of the Montagues
104
350921
3535
05:54
is what we literature people call his hamartia,
105
354480
3171
05:57
or what causes his downfall.
106
357675
2245
06:00
Oh, yes.
107
360610
1180
06:01
He goes down at the hands of Romeo.
108
361814
2473
06:05
So when you're looking at Shakespeare, stop and look at the words,
109
365422
4079
06:09
because they really are trying to tell you something.
110
369525
2870

Original video on YouTube.com
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7