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  • Casual Articles - Words Used Right -- No. 5: An Accurate Quote Can Be a Misquote

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    ne who never read the poem it's taken from. In Mending Fences, the person making the statement is a neighbor with whom Frost disagrees. A few lines later, Frost wrote, "Something there is that does not love a fence." Frost, in his own voice, says he doesn't like fences unless they're needed to keep livestock penned. He wrote:

    "Be

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    Shakespeare didn't want to kill all the lawyers, and Robert Frost didn't think that good fences make good neighbors. Sometimes, people use famous lines by famous people to support their arguments. And, too often, the words they quote not only weren't intended to support what they're saying, they actually mean the opposite. Quoting out of context is no doubt as old as speaking out of turn. Which is fine as long as the quoter is using the quote to mean what it did originally. Otherwise, when someone says, "As Shakespeare said, first we must kill all the lawyers," there's always the danger of having someone like me say, "But Shakespeare didn't say that." Then, if I'm lucky, there's a dispute that lets me explain that Shakespeare wrote the line in Henry VI Part 2 (Act IV, Scene II), but he never said anyone should kill lawyers. It wasn't his opinion. In fact, he put the line, "The first thing we do, let's kill all the lawyers," into the mouth of Dick the Butcher who was part of a mob of rioters who knew what they planned was illegal and figured if there were no lawyers they wouldn't get prosecuted. Besides being inaccurate, it's not fair to Shakespeare-or any other speaker-to twist the meaning of his words.

    It's the same with the fence thing. Most of the time, "Good fences make good neighbors," is used to support an argument in favor of fences by someone who never read the poem it's taken from. In Mending Fences, the person making the statement is a neighbor with whom Frost disagrees. A few lines later, Frost wrote, "Something there is that does not love a fence." Frost, in his own voice, says he doesn't like fences unless they're needed to keep livestock penned. He wrote:

    "Bef

    The Changing Real Estate Market
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    oubt as old as speaking out of turn. Which is fine as long as the quoter is using the quote to mean what it did originally. Otherwise, when someone says, "As Shakespeare said, first we must kill all the lawyers," there's always the danger of having someone like me say, "But Shakespeare didn't say that." Then, if I'm lucky, there's a dispute that lets me explain that Shakespeare wrote the line in Henry VI Part 2 (Act IV, Scene II), but he never said anyone should kill lawyers. It wasn't his opinion. In fact, he put the line, "The first thing we do, let's kill all the lawyers," into the mouth of Dick the Butcher who was part of a mob of rioters who knew what they planned was illegal and figured if there were no lawyers they wouldn't get prosecuted. Besides being inaccurate, it's not fair to Shakespeare-or any other speaker-to twist the meaning of his words.

    It's the same with the fence thing. Most of the time, "Good fences make good neighbors," is used to support an argument in favor of fences by someone who never read the poem it's taken from. In Mending Fences, the person making the statement is a neighbor with whom Frost disagrees. A few lines later, Frost wrote, "Something there is that does not love a fence." Frost, in his own voice, says he doesn't like fences unless they're needed to keep livestock penned. He wrote:

    "Be

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    explain that Shakespeare wrote the line in Henry VI Part 2 (Act IV, Scene II), but he never said anyone should kill lawyers. It wasn't his opinion. In fact, he put the line, "The first thing we do, let's kill all the lawyers," into the mouth of Dick the Butcher who was part of a mob of rioters who knew what they planned was illegal and figured if there were no lawyers they wouldn't get prosecuted. Besides being inaccurate, it's not fair to Shakespeare-or any other speaker-to twist the meaning of his words.

    It's the same with the fence thing. Most of the time, "Good fences make good neighbors," is used to support an argument in favor of fences by someone who never read the poem it's taken from. In Mending Fences, the person making the statement is a neighbor with whom Frost disagrees. A few lines later, Frost wrote, "Something there is that does not love a fence." Frost, in his own voice, says he doesn't like fences unless they're needed to keep livestock penned. He wrote:

    "Be

    Buying a Home After Bankruptcy
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    hey planned was illegal and figured if there were no lawyers they wouldn't get prosecuted. Besides being inaccurate, it's not fair to Shakespeare-or any other speaker-to twist the meaning of his words.

    It's the same with the fence thing. Most of the time, "Good fences make good neighbors," is used to support an argument in favor of fences by someone who never read the poem it's taken from. In Mending Fences, the person making the statement is a neighbor with whom Frost disagrees. A few lines later, Frost wrote, "Something there is that does not love a fence." Frost, in his own voice, says he doesn't like fences unless they're needed to keep livestock penned. He wrote:

    "Be

    The Pros and Cons of Joining a Writing Group
    As any writer can tell you, writing is a solitary pursuit, and most writers are solitary creatures, quite content to work alone. Still, writers can often benefit by the company of others with similar goals and dreams, so many writers turn to writing groups. Whether meeting in local, public places or in an online format only, writing groups can be a blessing for a writer.Joining a writing group, however, can be a big investment of time and effort. So if you're
    ne who never read the poem it's taken from. In Mending Fences, the person making the statement is a neighbor with whom Frost disagrees. A few lines later, Frost wrote, "Something there is that does not love a fence." Frost, in his own voice, says he doesn't like fences unless they're needed to keep livestock penned. He wrote:

    "Before I built a wall I'd ask to know

    What I was walling in or walling out."

    That's why we have to be careful when we pull a quote out of the air and stick it in something we're writing. We mustn't confuse what an author wrote with what he or she believed. It's so easy to do that when the quote is taken out of its context because it's often necessary to have a character say something that is totally opposite what the writer believes in order to create dramatic conflict. Then, someone (again, who probably never read the original) will quote the character and claim that the author held the opinion. Good writing gets a bad rap because people quote, out of context, a character whom the writer intended as a bad example. Mark Twain's Huck Finn has been called a racist book because of racist remarks by Huck's father, Pap. In the context of the book, Twain paints Pap as the worst sort of bigot and all-around despicable person. Twain wasn't racist, nor is the book. The character is, and it's how Twain showed his opposition to racism.

    Was Rudyard Kipling a racist or xenophobic because he wrote, "East is East and West is West and never the twain shall meet?" (Actually, Kipling did meet Twain in 1889, but that's another story.) The first and last lines of "The Ballad of East and West" certainly seem to say that. What's missed by the less-than

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