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As You Like It (Revised)
As You Like It (Revised) | William Shakespeare
155 posts | 136 read | 1 reading | 31 to read
This wisely funny comedy, which contains some of Shakespeare's loveliest poetry, contrasts a country's world of envy and rivalry with a forest's world of compassion and harmony. In the Forest of Arden, the banished young heroine, Rosalind, disguised as a gentleman farmer, encounters an extraordinary assemblage of characters, including a fool, a malcontent traveler, her own banished father, and the banished young man she loves. Romantic happiness triumphs, even as we laugh at the excesses of love, at the ways of court and countryside, indeed, at everything, in this masterpiece of comic writing,
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sarahbellum
As You Like It | William Shakespeare
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I‘ve been sick with a persistent cough 😩

Since it had been awhile since I last read Shakespeare and I love listening to productions of plays on Hoopla, I decided to do an immersion read of As You Like It and it was such an enjoyable experience. There were lots of songs in this one, so hearing them sung was 👩🏻‍🍳😘
Not my favorite Shakespearean play, but still fun!

My third and final #roll100 for April!
#dogsoflitsy

Soubhiville What a cute baby! Hope you feel better soon. 3y
Ruthiella Hope you feel better soon ! 3y
AmyG Feel better! 3y
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RaeLovesToRead Get well soon! 3y
PuddleJumper Feel better! Beautiful pupper 3y
45 likes6 comments
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sarahbellum
As You Like It | William Shakespeare
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Started my Saturday with an immersion read of Act 1 of As You Like It 🤓 #shakespeare

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Awk_Word_Smith
As You Like It (Revised) | William Shakespeare
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Drinking my morning Cup o‘ Joe from my Insults By #Shakespeare mug.

What is your favorite Shakespearean insult?

Mine is from “As You Like It” — my all-time favorite work by Shakespeare: “I do desire we may be better strangers.”

#books #WritingCommunity #author #authors #amwriting #amediting #writers #BookTwitter #BookWorm #bookstagram #shakespeare #insults #shakespeareaninsults

SamAnne Love that! 3y
theladygreer I love all the playful insults in Much Ado About Nothing, like “Courtesy itself must convert to disdain if you come in her presence.” 3y
Awk_Word_Smith @theladygreer 😂 Shakespeare—the originator of the clap back! 3y
18 likes4 comments
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Awk_Word_Smith
As You Like It (Revised) | William Shakespeare
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Billy getting cold blooded on his “birthday”.

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La_Cori
As You Like It (Revised) | William Shakespeare
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#QuotsyFeb21 @TK-421

“All the world's a #stage,
And all the men and women merely players;
They have their exits and their entrances;
And one man in his time plays many parts,
His acts being seven ages.”

TK-421 👏👏👏 4y
44 likes1 comment
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DebinHawaii
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#ChristmasQuotes #holiday

“Come, woo me, woo me, for now I am in a holiday
humour and like enough to consent.”

-Rosalind, As You Like It by William Shakespeare

EadieB Nice! 4y
39 likes1 comment
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atifyamin
Pickpick

Good

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OriginalCyn620
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54 likes1 comment
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Awk_Word_Smith
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That‘s cold, Bill!

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alisonrose
Pickpick

(Oops, forgot to review this here!) definitely enjoyed this, tho it‘s not without its flaws. I feel like it‘s almost a dramedy rather than comedy, there‘s some heavy stuff in here alongside the lighter things like the clown scenes, the lovers‘ laments, ladies-dressed-as-men trope. Also another one with just a bit too much crammed into a short play. Could‘ve done w/o one or two little side arcs. But still great & a quick, mostly light read. 4/5 ⭐️

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alisonrose

Thou seest we are not all alone unhappy.
This wide and universal theater
Presents more woeful pageants than the scene
Wherein we play in.

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alisonrose

And this our life, exempt from public haunt,
Finds tongues in trees, books in the running brooks,
Sermons in stones, and good in everything.

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alisonrose
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According to my Goodreads, I read this one at some long ago point in my life, because I had it on my vague “read before 2011” shelf (2011 being the year I started using Goodreads in earnest), but I have no memory of it at all. So technically a reread but one that‘ll feel new. 👌🏻🎭 #nowreading

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Eggs
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TheSpineView Love Shakespeare! Good choice! ❄❄❄ 5y
Eggs @TheSpineView ❤️❄️❤️ 5y
27 likes2 comments
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TheEllieMo
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Awk_Word_Smith
As You Like It | William Shakespeare
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That‘s cold, Bill. Cold. #ShakespeareanInsults #Shakespeare

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BookFairy1519

“Lie not, to say mine eyes are murders. Scratch thee but with a pin and there remains some scar of it. Lean upon a rush, the cicatrice and capable impressure thy palm some moment keeps. And now mine eyes, which I have darted at thee, hurt thee not. Nor I am sure there is no force in eyes that can do hurt.”
—Phoebe

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SerialReader
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Just added a bunch of Shakespearean comedies to #serialreader including As You Like It, The Comedy of Errors, The Taming of the Shrew, and more. Find them all, plus other comedies by Shakespeare already in the app, in the new collection here: https://www.serialreader.org/collection/5d3dad5ca5468404af76dc03/

Julsmarshall Ooh, just signed up for As You Like It. Thanks for sharing! 😄 (edited) 5y
Megabooks Awesome! I love Taming! 5y
batsy Tagging the #ShakespeareReadAlong group :) 5y
37 likes3 comments
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WhatWouldJaneDo
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Our first Shakespeare in the Park performance of the summer: As You Like It! Pretty nice evening, and hopefully it'll cool off even more once the sun goes down.

ulrichyumiodd I love Shakespeare in the park! I believe we‘re getting Measure for Measure this year in Montreal. 5y
WhatWouldJaneDo @ulrichyumiodd we're also getting Shakespeare in Love this summer (Shakespeare Dallas will usually do one by the Bard and one that's in a similar spirit during the summer season) and then Macbeth this fall, which is one of my faves. 5y
Blueberry Ah, you reminded me I haven't gone in a few yrs. 5y
ulrichyumiodd @WhatWouldJaneDo That‘s exciting! I never heard of more than one per year here, but it‘s still better than nothing :) 5y
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AvidReader25
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First trip to a bookstore with both of my kiddos was a success! That‘s an important event for us! 📚

DivineDiana Making memories! 👏🏻📚👏🏻 5y
charl08 Aw: such a lovely pic. 5y
34 likes2 comments
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EmilieGR
Pickpick

I love this one

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TsundokuAleax
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We just closed the Young Acting Company's production of this show. It was an original edit done by our director and it was amazing. These kids were able to do Shakespeare better than some adults I have seen. I am so proud of them all for the work they did to get here. Also, we actually had the little ones on stage as goats. I never want to see this done without that again. It was brilliant and one of my favorite scenes.

BarbaraTheBibliophage So great!! 👏🏻👏🏻🥳🥳 6y
21 likes1 comment
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Ke633
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Random stacks of Books #4 My Shakespeare pile. 😂

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suzisteffen
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Here we go, Oregon Shakespeare Festival! Kicking off with #AsYouLikeIt!

suzisteffen #shakespeare 🎭🎟🎟 6y
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Lcsmcat
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I love the punning and word-play in the play! #lame #quotsyfeb19 @TK-421

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jpmcwisemorgan
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Lcsmcat
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TobeyTheScavengerMonk
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“Here feel we but the penalty of Adam,
The seasons' difference, as the icy fang
And churlish chiding of the winter's wind,
Which, when it bites and blows upon my body,
Even till I shrink with cold, I smile and say
'This is no flattery: these are counsellors
That feelingly persuade me what I am.'”

- a great Shakespeare quote to have running through your head while walking your dog in the bitter cold

Suet624 It‘s funny because today I was appreciating the fact that I didn‘t have to walk a dog on this frigid morning. 6y
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Lcsmcat
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arlenefinnigan
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I don't mind telling you, Prescot (near Liverpool) was an absolute dump when I was growing up here in the 80s and 90s. Mass unemployment and a huge derelict factory in the 80s, and all the pubs were scruffy and full of Carling-fuelled scallies when I started drinking in the 90s. Now they're building a Shakespeare theatre here and there's a Shakespeare themed micropub called the Bard. Exciting times.

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Oryx
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Thanks for the awesome stickers Helen @squirrelbrain

Really cool! #jbuk

squirrelbrain 📖❤️📖❤️ 6y
Hooked_on_books Those stickers rock! 6y
83 likes2 comments
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Jess_Read_This
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♠️My apologies on the delay in posting who won the Shakespeare Comedy mug- there were quite a few entries to tally! The winner of this fine piece of china and tea accompaniments is..... @TheBookHippie !!!!
(Email me at purple_violets01 at yahoo dot com)

Congrats! I‘ve been having so much fun and learning from the great discussions being had on #TheShakespeareReadAlong threads.

AmyG @TheBookHippie Congrats!🎉 7y
readinginthedark Congratulations, @TheBookHippie ! 😉☕️ 7y
TheBookHippie OHHHHHHH SO EXCITED!!!! Thank you soooo much!!! 7y
Jess_Read_This @TheBookHippie Did you get it yet? I tried to bubble wrap it up like Fort Knox style 6y
TheBookHippie @Jess_Read_This yes!!!!! Just!!! I was out of town at a wedding it's all perfect!!!! I'll get a post up after school!!! 6y
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JuliaTheBookNerd
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I love the name Rosalind! #FavCharacterName 💜
#ReadingResolutions 💐📖

#BookNerd 📚💙

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merelybookish
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Since starting the #shakespearereadalong, these Folger Library editions have become my favourite. #yellowedpages #oldcoolbooks @Linsy

TheBookHippie Ohhhh pretty!!! 7y
Kimberlone Love those vintage Folger editions! I had the great opportunity to see a production of Hamlet performed at the Folger during a visit to DC during college 7y
rabbitprincess I love Folger editions! I like how the notes and the text are side-by-side, and they don't provide *too* many notes. I just want to know if something is supposed to be a pun 😂 7y
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merelybookish @TheBookHippie I love their cover art! 7y
merelybookish @Kimberlone Cool! I've never been to the Folger. Would love to go! 7y
merelybookish @rabbitprincess Agreed. I like how the notes are formatted and that they aren't overwhelming! 7y
Ranchan They're far too expensive, but I've always liked the Wordsworth/Oxford classics editions! So much additional information on the (historic) background, etc! These look great too (but are probably a little hard to get in the Netherlands) :) 7y
merelybookish @oOArankaOo I mostly just try to buy cheap used copies. But I've grown to like the Folger editions. Maybe I can send you one penpal. Do you have a favourite play? 7y
Ranchan @merelybookish Shakespeare is barely taught in the Netherlands, apart from English degrees at uni, so not many used editions can be found unforunately. If they're not too heavy, a copy of As You Like It ir All's Well would be wonderful! 😍 7y
Linsy ♥️ 7y
readinginthedark These are great copies! And I see them a lot at used book sales, so that‘s handy! 7y
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mariaku21
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Although I wasn't a fan of the audio quality compared to other BBC productions, Helena Bonham Carter as Rosalind was still a joy!

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cocomass
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FINALLY finished As You Like It for the #Shakespearereadalong and LOVED it. So sweet and funny with awesome female characters and clever wordplay. Definitely one of my favorite Shakespeare plays (top 3 for sure). Not on to Othello!

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readinginthedark
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I may have spent the last couple of days playing Sims and making characters based on As You Like It... 🙈😂 Meet Ros, Celia, and Orlando Frederick! The kids‘ teddy bears are named Oliver and Jaques. Ros is a rock star who co-owns the town spa, and her husband cheated on her and was kicked out of the house. 😎

TobeyTheScavengerMonk Oh well done! 7y
night_shift I miss having a computer & breeding my SIMs. 7y
CouronneDhiver I miss that game... loved it as a teen! 7y
readinginthedark @TobeyTheScavengerMonk @UnidragonFrag I knew you guys would understand! 7y
readinginthedark @CouronneDhiver I didn‘t play any games as a teen, so it‘s a bit newer for me. But it took me a while not to just fail at everything! 😆 7y
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TobeyTheScavengerMonk
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The Arkangel audio production was fantastic, particularly the music, and now I‘m going to celebrate Shakespeare‘s sort-of birthday by watching this awesome adaptation directed by Kenneth Branagh and set in feudal Japan.

Fans of the play should check this out if they haven‘t.

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cocomass
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Playing catch up today before beginning Othello. Act III was my favorite so far—the wordplay was phenomenal. Shakespeare was such a trippy dude, and I‘ll never understand his predilection for using cross-dressing to forward a plot 😂

Also: “The oath of a lover is no stronger than the word of a tapster; they are both the confirmer of false reckonings.”

#Shakespearereadalong

readinginthedark I think the cross dressing was funnier at the time, because you had a man playing a woman playing a man. 🤷🏻‍♀️ 7y
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readinginthedark
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Reading the last of my background info and manga today so I‘ll be ready to start Othello tomorrow! There are some interesting observations here, and they address Rosalind‘s choice of the name Ganymede.
#ShakespeareReadalong

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MayJasper
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Woo hoo a combined answer to today's photo challenges - #stage and #somethingfunny
#hopintospring by @vkois88 and @Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks
#readingresolutions by @Jess7

Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks Way to go!!! 🙌🏻👏🏻 7y
vkois88 🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗 7y
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TobeyTheScavengerMonk
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“And this our life exempt from public haunt
Finds tongues in trees, books in the running brooks,
Sermons in stones and good in every thing.
I would not change it.”

I wanted something light and Springy for my audio commute today so I went with one of Shakespeare‘s super lightweight plays, which @batsy perfectly described as “beach read Shakespeare”.

batsy Gorgeous view 😍 It's a perfect springtime read, I think :) 7y
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batsy
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I enjoyed this little romp in the woods despite the problematic gender politics. You get the sense that all's well that ends well = order restored, i.e. women back in their appointed place. But there was that silly, satirical tone throughout that I relished. It's like a "beach read" Shakespeare; the pages just flew by. The dynamic between Rosalind & Celia was fab. I love me a moody, do-nothing philosopher, so I do have a soft spot for Jaques ?

Cathythoughts “Beach read Shakespeare “ 🤷🏻‍♀️🤭❤️ only you could invent this @batsy And I love it. Xxxxxx 7y
readinginthedark 👏🏻❤️ 7y
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merelybookish Exactly! 😁 7y
batsy @Cathythoughts Haha, thank you 💜 #beachread 🍹 7y
RaimeyGallant Well put. 7y
batsy @RaimeyGallant Thanks :) 7y
Jess_Read_This Your review is perfect! 7y
batsy @Jess_Read_This Thank you 💜 7y
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Jess_Read_This
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🎭Act 5 and the conclusion of As You Like It🎭

📜Act 4 had a snake and lion. Act 5 brings us Hymen, the god of marriage, to bless the union of the four couples who were brought together in a varied series of events that deviated from normal courtship. The Duke Senior is restored. And I have the song lyric “with a hey, and a ho, and a hey nonny-no” stuck in my head.

#ShakespeareReadAlong folks- your thoughts on Act 5 or the play in entirety?

Jess_Read_This 🎭Spoileresque Comments Below🎭 7y
Jess_Read_This Overall: I‘m a bit torn. This was not my favorite play so far, yet there were some beautifully written lines in it. I feel like this was a hodge podge of plot elements thrown together and rapidly wrapped up with a bow... a song.. and a Roman god. But I wonder if all the plot elements were Will‘s way of testing the waters to see what worked well and what didn‘t with audiences? 7y
Jess_Read_This Act 5: I was a bit surprised at the strength of Touchstone‘s attack on Audrey‘s country admirer. I felt bad for poor Phoebe at getting tricked into marrying Silvius- not cool, R...not cool. I kind of felt R was too heavy handed in her directing of all the players and the big reveal was “meh” in dramatics. The Duke Senior and Orlando commenting on the similarity between G and R equaled what big hard eye roll for me. 7y
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Jess_Read_This However, I enjoyed the pastoral scene, the song lyrics, and overall, there were some great quotes in this play. My favorites were highlighted in a playbill pictured above from a Milwaukee theater company. 7y
GingerAntics Usually, I‘m a sucker for a happy ending, but I think the only reason I‘m a fan of this play at all is because I like Shakespeare that much. It‘s just not my cup of tea. It seemed like the deposed King just magically became king again at the end. What was his actual role throughout the play? The characters I liked at the beginning, I didn‘t like in the middle, and they never redeemed themselves by the end. Eh. Just not my favourite by a landslide. 7y
GingerAntics I‘m kind of disappointed. 7y
Erin7 I agree that there were some great quotes in this play. I felt sorry for S actually. To have it kind of thrown in his face that P was settling for him felt sad and makes me wonder what the rest of their story together would have been like. I feel like there was some choppiness to the storyline. But I think the lyric quality to R‘s ensuring that everyone would hold true to their promises of partner commitments at the end was fun for me. 7y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @Erin7 I have to agree with you. I disliked that part, but liked R‘s resolution at the ending. As an adult, the Duke who becomes King, but can‘t recognize his OWN daughter in disguise is very sad. But I have to say that I wish this is one we‘d have read in HS or Middle School before say Romeo and Juliet or Julius Cesar...it‘s a bit more fun & frivolous and I bet I would have enjoyed the goofiness more than, & definitely more than the tragedies.. 7y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa ...at that age. 7y
Jess_Read_This @GingerAntics I‘m kind of disappointed as well. I was expecting it get better and as we read each act.. it didn‘t. I love a happy ending too but I think I was irked enough by the characters to not have a strong investment in their happy ending. 7y
Jess_Read_This @Erin7 @Riveted_Reader_Melissa I am bit confused why he added the Silvius and Phoebe storyline. It just feels so wrong for both parties and I didn‘t see how it helped the plot along really. 7y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @Jess_Read_This Same with Audrey...I think they were all story fillers and comic relief. I wish we actually knew more about the order they were written, if I had to randomly guess, because really nobody knows, I‘d guess it‘s an earlier work. It‘s not as streamlined, and all the characters aren‘t as important to the main story, etc. 7y
GingerAntics @Jess_Read_This exactly! That is the perfect way to put it. 7y
Erin7 @Jess_Read_This my theory is that Shakespeare was trying to add a twist to the love story. Maybe he thought the cross dressed woman help the man she loves to woo her in her true form was not enough. There would be more comedy to another woman chasing her while she helps him chase her. I think it all boiled down to bringing it around to being able to do those chain sequence lines at the end. 7y
Jess_Read_This @Erin7 I think you completely nailed it. That makes a lot of sense. 7y
Jess_Read_This @Riveted_Reader_Melissa I think I read somewhere that it was an earlier work. I think that‘s why I thought maybe he was experimenting with different plot elements 7y
Lcsmcat I agree with @Erin7 , and I think, while they are all better viewed staged rather than read, this one particularly needs to be acted to work. 7y
readinginthedark @Lcsmcat That‘s exactly what I was thinking! With the others we‘ve read, I enjoyed reading the play in a different way; I was able to catch things I wouldn‘t have in a performance. Not so much with this one. I‘ve always loved watching it, so I expected to love reading it! But it fell short for me. 🤷🏻‍♀️ 7y
readinginthedark @Riveted_Reader_Melissa @GingerAntics @Jess_Read_This It makes sense that the Duke wouldn‘t recognize Rosalind, since he hasn‘t seen her for fourteen years or something. But the comment about Ganymede looking like her took it a little far. I think his role in the play had less to do with R and more to do with redemption (of the Duke‘s brother and Oliver) and restoring “good” people to their rightful places. 7y
GingerAntics @readinginthedark that‘s a good point...from that POV his role in the play makes far more sense. Yeah, I‘m going with your theory. 7y
merelybookish This was my first Shakespeare play. I read it in Grade 10 and remember enjoying it @Riveted_Reader_Melissa I do think the lovesick silliness is a good Shakespeare intro. I enjoyed re-reading it. I like that Rosalind is in control of a lot of the plot. And I like that a female friendship features so promiently. There are lots of convenient (questionable) plot developments but I enjoyed this lark in Arden forest. 7y
TheBookHippie @Jess_Read_This I'm torn as well some of the passages of words just gorgeous but some of the plot line seemed like he was trying 10 scenarios at once. However the POV and a strong women is wonderful. 7y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @merelybookish Exactly! When I was in school we read all the tragedies. I didn‘t even really get that he wrote comedies until college. Yes, there were weird plot loops and odd character choices, but it was fun and silly, everyone turns out good, for the better, and happily every after seems like just the kind of play I would have loved and found clever and funny as a young person. The girls wit, the teaching him how to woo her (as him)... (edited) 7y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa ...tricking everyone in the logic chain into marrying the ‘right‘ person for them. As a 9th grader I think I‘d have found it funny and clever, and not even thought the side characters wandering out of the forest at all odd, but just them meeting the local inhabitants. I thought it was fun now, and I‘m sure I‘d have loved it even more then. (edited) 7y
JennAndrew @Jess_Read_This @readinginthedark I‘m late to the party this week, sorry! I got the Charles Boyce Shakespeare A-Z this week though, so that was great! In the AYLI bit it suggests this is a play without a plot so much as opportunities for clever wordplay, & I think that sums it up for me. I didn‘t care for most of the characters & found the group marriage a weak ending, especially as I did not support some of the pairings. However, there was some.. 7y
JennAndrew Delightful dialogue and witty repartee, so I think that was the most enjoyable part for me. The A-Z suggests Silvius & Phoebe were standard pastoral characters- the ‘sentimental shepherd & hard-hearted shepherdess‘, however, I‘d have been happier to see Phebe & Audrey bunk off together at the end, ditching those useless dudes. Either for amazing adventures or maybe to marry each other, who knows?! I just felt it would be awful to marry a man as... 7y
JennAndrew Critical as Touchstone was of Audrey, or to settle for a man you actively tried to shun for years, like S & P. How depressing! I saw this on stage when I was younger & loved it- the forest, with love poems hanging from the branches- was dreamy & enchanting, it was funny & had more than just talking, but as an adult I‘ve found it a bit empty. I know Shakespeare can give so much more, so this was a So-So for me. 7y
batsy My thoughts summed up: what @merelybookish said 😆 It felt very light, even flimsy where plot was concerned, but I did love the banter and the philosophical musings of forest vs. court. Seems to be that human corruption will taint even the most Edenic of places? 🤔😬 7y
Jess_Read_This @JennAndrew I never considered the idea that this is a play without a plot and to focus on the wordplay. That kind of relaxes me a bit in my expectations, I guess? I‘d like to see Phoebe and Audrey take off together on an adventure too! 7y
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BookishBelle
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Pickpick

I finished reading this yesterday on the Chunnel to Paris. I thought it was a clever ending though I had read it before a few times. I liked Touchstone better in this Act. It seemed he was back to being a little more witty than jerkish. #ShakespeareReadalong @readinginthedark @Jess_Read_This

readinginthedark Touchstone was definitely better in this Act! I still have one or two scenes to go. This play isn‘t quite how I remembered it. 7y
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