Why is he the G.O.A.T?
Why is he the G.O.A.T?
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someone had to be
because there was free pussy and no vidya on his time
>being an adult male
>unironically using the term 'vidya'
Kill yourself
GOAT?
More liek TOAD! amirite
...
>being an adult male
>unironically using the term 'Kill yourself'
Grow yourself
>masterful use of English language whether of high or low diction
>lots of unique characters all with their own individual voice and psychologies
>proficient in multiple genres of theater and poetry
>always focused on deep themes and philosophies while being sure to entertain with drama and jokes
>subtle evasiveness always ensues that we will be reading and interpreting his work as long as we can
Favorites?
Othello or Antony and Cleopatra (not that other user)
>masterful use of English
certainly not always which becomes an annoying problem
Anglos overbloat it because they have no actual great authors
because of Hamlet, Midsummer, Julius Caesar, and The Tempest
Explain
What's everyone's favorite monologue?
I just memorized friends, Romans, countrymen and No matter where; of comfort no man speak.
He is great. All nationalities will agree with this. The Anglos (not the English people, but their shitty oligarchy of London) you speak of hate him. Everything else you said is true though, except for Chaucer, Marlowe, Milton (a favorite of the swamp dwellers, but he good), Keats, Shelly, and a few others.
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Shakespeare was redpilled against democracy and women after all. Nice XD
Because his plays combine the precise, effective language of poetry and the drama of the theater, and Shakespeare was the author of some of the most human characters in world literature, in contrast to Marlowe's caricatures.
I think Hamlet marks the first time when humanity truly started glancing at the abyss of nihilism that would eventually consume and haunt us in the modern world.
t. Samuel Johnson
The great tragedies are probably the greatest works in world literature, however some other plays like Henry IV, The Tempest, and Twelfth Night rank up there. As You Like It is definitely the most underrated of his plays.
Does all of Macbeth count?
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That's impressive if true
underrated
The "upon the king" soliloquy in Henry V
Metaphor
He was canonised by the Germans