tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7581099872724683650.post582800751480166862..comments2024-01-20T05:36:17.500-06:00Comments on Bardfilm: "And tomorrow and": A Shakespeare-Related Sci-Fi Short Storykjhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14863005904313974654noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7581099872724683650.post-17003970676026667002017-05-24T11:51:15.414-05:002017-05-24T11:51:15.414-05:00Thought #1, the author does a pretty spot on Monty...Thought #1, the author does a pretty spot on Monty Python impression.<br /><br />Thought #2, if we take the position that the witches *were* equivocating, and given that we learned earlier in the play that drink is the great equivocator, could it not be said therefore that the witches are made out of alcohol?<br /><br />But now we must ask ourselves, does alcohol float, like wood, very small rocks, or a duck? It does not, as anyone can attest who may once have gone on a fishing trip and accidentally dropped the beer overboard even though his arm had clearly been jostled, everybody saw it, clearly not his fault. Alcohol, when it comes into contact with water, promptly disappears. Therefore we can conclude with certainty that witches, being made out of alcohol, thus do not float and are, quid ipso facto detotum, not witches and therefore not made of alcohol.<br /><br />Duane Morinhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16569611828708601563noreply@blogger.com