Starborn Dragon
Captain
In the episode Hide And Q Picard was desperate to defend humanity from Q, so he quotes this passage from Shakespeare's Hamlet, Act 2 Scene 2:
Hamlet wasn't being sincere. He was in a pretty foul mood because he was loosing his mind. Hamlet is a tragedy, and Hamlet5 was going insane from some of the events that had happened previously. The speech was about the melancholy state he was in.
And the quote? Well, actually, Picard has two goods with it. he did not use the full quote, this is actually taken out of context. Here is the full passage:
Shakespeare wrote a lot of depressing stuff, and I'm not sure there would be a much better, more positive quote that Picard could have read to Q.
So what do you think? So you think there would be a much better Shakespearean quote to show the potential nobility of man?
So why is it a goof?Hamlet:
What a piece of work is a man, how noble in reason, how
infinite in faculties, in form and moving how express and
admirable, in action how like an angel, in apprehension how like a god! the beauty of the world, the paragon of animals—and yet,to me, what is this quintessence of dust? Man delights not me—nor woman neither, though by your smiling you seem to say so.
Rosencrantz:
My lord, there was no such stuff in my thoughts.
Hamlet wasn't being sincere. He was in a pretty foul mood because he was loosing his mind. Hamlet is a tragedy, and Hamlet5 was going insane from some of the events that had happened previously. The speech was about the melancholy state he was in.
And the quote? Well, actually, Picard has two goods with it. he did not use the full quote, this is actually taken out of context. Here is the full passage:
So, in hindsight, this was perhaps not the best source to quote to defend humanity to Q. There might be a better quote that he could have used, but I'm not entirely sure.I’ll tell you why—so you won’t have to tell me and give away any secrets you have with the king and queen. Recently, though I don’t know why, I’ve lost all sense of fun, stopped exercising—the whole world feels sterile and empty. This beautiful canopy we call the sky—this majestic roof decorated with golden sunlight—why, it’s nothing more to me than disease-filled air. What a perfect invention a human is, how noble in his capacity to reason, how unlimited in thinking, how admirable in his shape and movement, how angelic in action, how godlike in understanding! There’s nothing more beautiful. We surpass all other animals. And yet to me, what are we but dust? Men don’t interest me. No—women neither, but you’re smiling, so you must think they do.
Shakespeare wrote a lot of depressing stuff, and I'm not sure there would be a much better, more positive quote that Picard could have read to Q.
So what do you think? So you think there would be a much better Shakespearean quote to show the potential nobility of man?