10 Shakespeare Quotes For New Year’s Eve
We’re boarding up the windows on 2013. Before you can say “someone put all this God awful tinsel away already,” it’ll be New Year’s Eve, and that means drunken parties with noise-makers, dreaming up resolutions, and failing to find a cab. We’ve got some Shakespeare quotes to help you party like it’s 1999. Or, you know, stay home and watch Breaking Bad on Netflix. The Bard is always here to help.
For when you skip the New Year’s Eve party to read and drink wine and then fall asleep at 10 p.m. because you don’t actually want to talk to anyone:
Good wine is a good familiar creature, if it be well used.
-Othello
For when your roommate’s lonely brother (or sister) comes to the party and follows you around talking about how much he (or she) loves The Big Bang Theory:
I pray you, do not fall in love with me,
For I am falser than vows made in wine.
Besides, I like you not.
-As You Like It
For when the party you’re invited to ends up being filled with dude-bros who don’t understand how you find time to read when there’s so much other fun stuff to do, like streaking and painting your face at sports functions:
Hell is empty
And all the devils are here.
–The Tempest
For when someone gives you their cab:
How far that little candle throws his beams! So shines a good deed in a weary world.
–The Merchant of Venice
For when someone steals your cab:
Thou art a base, proud, shallow, beggarly, three-suited, hundred-pound, filthy worsted-stocking knave; a lily-liver’d, action-taking, whoreson, glass-gazing, superserviceable, finical rogue; one-trunk-inheriting slave; one that wouldst be a bawd in way of good service, and art nothing but the composition of a knave, beggar, coward, pandar, and the son and heir of a mungril bitch.
–King Lear
For when you see Ryan Seacrest hosting the ball drop:
One may smile, and smile, and be a villain.
–Hamlet
For when the party is just horrible and you have to leave right now and go home and put on your Snuggie:
Exit, pursued by a bear.
-The Winter’s Tale
For the morning after:
A glooming peace this morning with it brings;
The sun, for sorrow, will not show his head:
Go hence, to have more talk of these sad things;
Some shall be pardon’d, and some punished
-Romeo and Juliet
For when you get into a fight with your significant other right before the midnight kiss:
Thou and I are too wise to woo peaceably.
-Much Ado About Nothing
For when you want to feel better about not making any resolutions:
But ’tis a common proof
That lowliness is young ambition’s ladder,
Whereto the climber upward turns his face.
But when he once attains the upmost round,
He then unto the ladder turns his back,
Looks in the clouds, scorning the base degrees
By which he did ascend.
-Julius Caesar
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