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#4 - N. Korean citizen (11/19/2011) [-]
1. "Sheakspere"
2. "Shakepere"
3. Shakespeare wrote plays, not prose.
#13 to #4 - darkoneten (11/20/2011) [-]
ACTUALLY, "prose" refers any writing with grammatical structure. It is basically any writing that is not in verse form, i.e, poetry. A play is most defiantly prose.

So once again, anon is wrong. Interestingly enough however, many scholars today think that Shakespeare might have been gay. If that is the case, then one can make the argument, through association, that OP is a Richard Simmons.
#25 to #13 - N. Korean citizen (11/20/2011) [-]
plays do not have gramatical structure!
Hence why prose is prose, and plays are plays
User avatar #10 to #4 - Mefarted (11/20/2011) [-]
prose = lower class character (nurse, sampson and gregory)
lambic pentameter/sonnet = higher class character (paris, romeo and juliet)
#7 to #4 - qazxswwsx (11/20/2011) [-]
Shakespeare*
User avatar #9 to #7 - StinkyCheese (11/20/2011) [-]
Look closely at the comic. Now look back to that comment. This comment makes more sense now.





Everything's better with old spice.
User avatar #5 to #4 - mteverestand (11/19/2011) [-]
He wrote both. Over a hundred sonnets have his name on them.
#8 to #5 - N. Korean citizen (11/20/2011) [-]
Sonnets are poems...
User avatar #11 to #8 - Mefarted (11/20/2011) [-]
Tis true, and therefore women, being the weaker vessels, are ever thrust to the wall: therefor I will push Montagues's men from the wall, and thrust his maids to the wall.

prose = not poetry
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