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what is "This above all: to thine own self be true." ? William Shakespeare
14 mai 2010 20:19
Réponses · 5
This above all: to thine own self be true, And it must follow, as the night the day, Thou canst not then be false to any man. One of Shakespeare's most profound truths. Simple really. If you give yourself the love, kindness, and forgiveness you require, you will do so automatically for others. This is also a shot at those who strive to be kind to others in order to get rewards. Doesn't work. LOL
15 mai 2010
Yes the big long answer is best. But you don't understand the scope of what a stage play means. Especially that guy you're reading now. In other words, you must see it performed to fully appreciate the significance.
14 mai 2010
Many people take this to mean "Be true to your own values" or "Don't lie to yourself or delude yourself." It is stated in Hamlet by Polonious giving advice to his son Laertes. The full text is: This above all: to thine own self be true, And it must follow, as the night the day, Thou canst not then be false to any man. Farewell, my blessing season this in thee! What he means here is something more cynical than we take it today. It means "To your own interests be true. If you take care of yourself first, you'll be able to take care of others." Ask yourself if Polonious, a man who is spying on Hamlet for Claudius, would be giving high-minded advice. Mister Wright is correct about "thine". It served the same purpose as German "dein", or Chinese 你的,as opposed to "Ihr" and 您的, respectively.
14 mai 2010
"Thine" is archaic (old) english, and is not used anymore, except in literature.
14 mai 2010
The word "thine" means "your". You could rephrase this statement as: "The most important thing: be true to yourself (or "be true to your own self")."
14 mai 2010
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