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That moment in your day when your trying to explain what Shakespear's character Friar Lawrence meant in his quote "These violet delights have violent ends
And in their triumph die, like fire and powder.
Which, as they kiss, consume." and so you google an explanation, and people are arguing with others saying that quote isn't from shakespear, it's from a Twilight book...-
I can totally relate... >w>
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I was reading through someones answers on Yahoo help or whatever it's called, and the OP just said "I need to know for a report on the book" and most explained it normally. but then there were 8 or 9 posts mentioning how it's from Twilight and how it reflects sparkle douche's feelings for low selfesteemed abuse addict and their blooming love.
Then people pointed out that it was originally from Shakespear's Romeo and Juliet, and the flame war ensued!
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doesn't it mean like you shouldn't have sex with prostitutes because they have STD's the violent part representing the illegalness off it, the fire and powder part representing gonorrhea, and the consume part meaning the money you just wasted as a dumb consumer
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