APAD: Now is the winter of our discontent

来源: 2024-07-12 08:50:59 [博客] [旧帖] [给我悄悄话] 本文已被阅读:

Meaning:

    It express the idea that we have reached the depth of our unhappiness and

    that better times are ahead.

 

Background:

   `Now is the winter of our discontent', is the first line of Shakespeare's

   Richard III, 1594. It needs to be read together with the second line of the

   play `made glorious summer by this sun of York'. Shakespeare was using the

   summer/winter weather as a metaphor for the fortunes of the English House of

   York and its rivalry with the Plantagenets for the English throne. The `sun

   of York' wasn't of course a comment on Yorkshire weather but on the `son of

   York' Edward IV.

 

   So, what Richard is saying is that we are now at the depth of the winter but

   the son of York (Edward) is like the sun of Summer and good times are on the

   way.

 

- www.phrases.org.uk [edited]

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Richard III sounded more upbeat than the legendary old man who lost a horse.

Centuries later, Jocko Willink, of the Battle of Ramadi (Iraq War) fame,

summarizes his personal philosophy in one word, "Good."