A Conversation for Ask h2g2

Shakespeare & Sex Toys...

Post 1

HappyDude

"Delicate burthens of dildos and fadings"
From Winter's Tale: Act 4 by William Shakespeare

What exactly was he referring to, I am assuming the common meaning of the word was somewhat different in Shakespeare's time to its current common meaning.

smiley - huh


Shakespeare & Sex Toys...

Post 2

Saturnine

Nope.

The word "dildo" dates back to the 16th century...

But Shakespeare littered his plays with bawdy puns such as that one...the audience loved them...


Shakespeare & Sex Toys...

Post 3

HappyDude

smiley - ta


Shakespeare & Sex Toys...

Post 4

Saturnine

Happy to oblige!!! smiley - bigeyes

smiley - blacksheep


Shakespeare & Sex Toys...

Post 5

HappyDude

I don't suppose you would consider answering the question again in the other place I asked smiley - huh
F103790?thread=222958?thread=&post=2661456#p2661456


Shakespeare & Sex Toys...

Post 6

egon

So basically the reason no-one finds Shakespeare comedies funny is that they were an early form of "Carry On" movies...


Shakespeare & Sex Toys...

Post 7

HappyDude

smiley - erm

Falstaff Rules smiley - ok


Shakespeare & Sex Toys...

Post 8

egon

I've got to admit, although largely I dislike Shakespeare, I like Romeo and Juliet, and I saw a very good performance of Henry IV at LIPA's Paul McCartney auditorium, with a fantastic Falstaff, and the Bishop of York played by a German called Wolfgang.


Shakespeare & Sex Toys...

Post 9

HappyDude

smiley - biggrin


Shakespeare & Sex Toys...

Post 10

HappyDude

I couple of weeks ago I wuz talking to Simon Callow about his book "Henry IV, Part I (Actors on Shakespeare)", which features a lot about Falstaff, on the strength of that conversation I went out and bought the book - I highly recommend it smiley - smiley


Shakespeare & Sex Toys...

Post 11

Saturnine

No, the reason no one finds Shakespeare's comedies funny, is because they were written in a different era. I occasionally get the jokes, but only because I am pretty good at listening to Elizabethan language...


Shakespeare & Sex Toys...

Post 12

Saturnine

Hamlet is my current favorite that I am casually pulling apart to use for my own means...


Shakespeare & Sex Toys...

Post 13

Otto Fisch ("Stop analysing Strava.... and cut your hedge")


Some of Shakespeare's comedies are funny, but only in performance and only by talented actors who have a good director. They're not funny when read in a book, but then if you take the funniest current comedies you can think of and just read the script, they're not nearly as funny as in performance.

Otto


Shakespeare & Sex Toys...

Post 14

Cloviscat

smiley - yikes at Happy Dude

*Rushes off to check if shameless namedropping is a transgression of the house rules*

smiley - winkeye


Shakespeare & Sex Toys...

Post 15

Cloviscat

smiley - yikes at Happy Dude

*Rushes off to check if shameless namedropping is a transgression of the house rules*

smiley - winkeye


Shakespeare & Sex Toys...

Post 16

Saturnine

Well, speak for yourself! Like I said, I get the jokes. I can read comedy & laugh. All depends on the imagination and level of understanding.


Shakespeare & Sex Toys...

Post 17

Gubernatrix

Webster's reckons that in this case it means "A burden in popular songs", and quotes "Delicate burthens of dildos and fadings" as an example.

Webster's also says that a 'fading' is "an Irish dance, also the burden of a song". A burden is a chorus or refrain.

So, on the face of it, 'dildo' here doesn't mean what we hope it does.

As to whether Sh. is deliberately making a pun, who knows? I'm not sure whether the modern meaning of dildo was actually current in the early 17th century. One would probably have to consult the full OED, which I don't have.

Context may also give a clue.


Shakespeare & Sex Toys...

Post 18

The Fairy Melusine

I would guess that he is deliberately making a pun. The thing I find about Shakespeare is the fact that he layers his humour so subtlely. There is something for everyone, complex jokes for the toffs and bawdy humour for the groundlings.

I really like him, though I don't like Romeo and Juliet. I think Troilus and Cressida is a better examination of humans in love. Me, bitter? Surely not! smiley - winkeye


Shakespeare & Sex Toys...

Post 19

Saturnine

I got my earlier definition from OED...! 16th century origin...


Shakespeare & Sex Toys...

Post 20

Gubernatrix

Yes, the origin is 16th century, but that doesn't mean it was in 'current usage'.

As a matter of fact, I think it *is* intended as a pun, but this is only because of the context of the quotation, not because I assume that it must to be the case.

It occurs in a comic scene and the (ingenuous) speaker is talking about Autolycus' "love-songs for maids; so without bawdry, which is strange".


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