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Launcelot Gobbo (a clown, first Shylock's servant and then Bassanio's) says this to Gobbo, his father in The Merchant of Venice (act 2 Scene 2). He has just encountered his father, who does not recognize him.
l would like to know the answer myself....
Your husband is the one at fault and not father material at all. It is not a matter of whether his wife has a right to go and see your child's games or goes and gets him, but you should be thankful she does as she is trying to make up for her husband's absence as she knows it must hurt the child with the father not there. Perhaps the two of you could go to the games together to see your child play. Don't blame the wife (be thankful) and blame your ex husband for being a lazy and unattached father figure.
No, "I love talking about nothing, father. It is the only thing I know anything about." is a quote from Oscar Wilde's play "The Importance of Being Earnest."
Yes, you do.
Enclose the quote with quotation marks: "Put the quote from a play here."
Clotaldo is Rosaura's father. In some adaptations, it is portrayed that Clotaldo knows this from seeing Rosaura's sword, but keeps quiet about it until the end of the play. I have done plenty of research on Rosaura since I got the part to play her in one of the adaptations of the play.
This quote came from the film Casablanca. The quote was said by the character Ilsa Lund.
Abraham was the father of the child of the promise. God promised him that he would have a child whose descendants would eventually be the salvation of all mankind.
"To be or not to be" is a quote from the play Hamlet by William Shakespeare.
The quote does not appear in any Shakespeare play.
Hamlet