Yes
fine, noble or handsome. found in The Tempest, (the Pelican Shakespeare version) pg. 6
Miranda says it in The Tempest: "Oh, brave new world that has such creatures on it."
Because he is the art that they aren't allowed to have so when John quotes him & stuff, it shows how ART is an important aspect that they tend to lack :)
Citizens of the World State do not know about Shakespeare. Only 3 people in the novel know about him: John, Helmholtz Watson, and Mustapha Mond. Helmholtz is amazed, and at one point amused, by the passion and power of Shakespeare's words. Mustapha also knows the value of Shakespeare but recognizes that no true citizen of the WS would ever hope to understand it.
Very brave
fine, noble or handsome. found in The Tempest, (the Pelican Shakespeare version) pg. 6
Miranda says it in The Tempest: "Oh, brave new world that has such creatures on it."
Maybe because theres a lot of sex and orgies in it ...
So far as I know it never was - in the UK at any rate. Where was it banned? i only know Ireland Miller, Missouri California
Shakespeare
She is an important brave women who research about chimps
he was brave ambitious greedy and had low self confidense he was brave ambitious greedy and had low self confidense
I would of thought so. If he didn't he was a brave man. :)
In "Brave New World" by Aldous Huxley, John the Savage reads and finds solace in the works of William Shakespeare, particularly the play "The Tempest." He quotes and relates to passages from Shakespeare's works throughout the novel.
Aside from the line in A Midsummer Night's Dream, absolutely nothing.
John quotes lines from Shakespeare's "Romeo and Juliet" while gazing at Lenina in a soma-induced sleep in Brave New World. Specifically, he recites Romeo's lines from the balcony scene in Act 2, Scene 2.
The Complete Works of William Shakespeare. THougH he Also read another book that his mother brought for him from "Civilization".