WHAT DID SHAKESPEARE MEAN BY THIS?

????

That were best timeline?

...

A paddock is a stable or some shut and user means soon.
KYS.

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We wuz iambic pentameter and sheeit.

You think you're playing with amateurs? Hope you're all reading your Baron Trump books, Sup Forums

>shitposting about the best play ever written

>Macbeth

...so somebody is going to kill Trump, seize power and do guilt ridden despot things?

It's called synchronicity.

Paddock is a frog familiar

That isn't not how you spell Hamlet.

reality is collapsing, we did it

holy shit this is spoopy

Except the witches didn't speak in iambic pentameter

Stop. Just stop now.

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Indeed, something very rotten in Denmark

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WHAT DOES IT MEAN?!

>Fair is foul, and foul is fair.

NEAT!

Chec'ked

pad·dock
ˈpadək/
noun
noun: paddock; plural noun: paddocks

1.
a small field or enclosure where horses are kept or exercised.
synonyms: field, meadow, pasture; More
pen, pound, corral
"the horses got out of the paddock"
an enclosure adjoining a racetrack where horses are gathered and displayed before a race.

verb
verb: paddock; 3rd person present: paddocks; past tense: paddocked; past participle: paddocked; gerund or present participle: paddocking

1.
keep or enclose (a horse) in a paddock.
"horses paddocked on a hillside"

Origin
early 17th century: apparently a variant of dialect parrock, of unknown ultimate origin.

Seek
Help

super teehee

You fucking retard, in Macbeth within the context of what OP posted paddock is a fucking toad!

obvious reference to today's nihilism, really hope the foul air thing is a reference to Agung or Yellowstone

kek bless my diggis
let the world know the true evil
of the jew

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>Fair is foul, and foul is fair.

A reference to the modern leftist agenda of so-called equality, and then to "racist and bigoted" right wing's rhetoric actually being true.

Some guy has a name this was something in the 15th century

Wow you don't say

>In the 15th century what did they call a bundle of sticks OP?

Time events flows both direction past-future, future-past. It's we that can only perceive one direction only.
The events of today just influenced Shakespeare in the past to write that part.
If you look more, you will find other syncronisms between today and Shakespeare's time that led to that phrase.

>those trips
Jungian synchronicity confirmed

>guys just stop it nothing

Everytime

Reality and Fiction are merging together

>Because I wasn't already insane enough.

That which hath been is now; and that which is to be hath already been; and God requireth that which is past.

Big if true

awh shit is it like epep the toad???

Soon

a bundle of sticks = Canadian

>paddock is a stable
What are you, a Jew?

>Hamlet
>Not Otelo
bigot