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Take a group of chimpanzees used to swinging through the trees, and sit them down at keyboards in a row; lots of paper, lots of ink, lots and lots of time, I think, and what the theory says I’m sure you know. Yes, along with all the junk, all the gibberish and bunk, somewhere there’d be the full works of the Bard: As You Like It, Cymbeline, Richards 2 and 3, the Dream, though Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, might be hard. But I’m sure the little blighters would get on fine with *Titus Andronicus*, The Taming of the Shrew, The Moor of Venice (that’s Othello), the other Merchant fellow, and Antony and Cleopatra too. The Winter’s Tale would hold no terrors, nor The Comedy of Errors, and Verona’s Gentlemen would turn out right; Love’s Labour might be Lost, or it might be Tempest-tossed, but All’s Well That Ends Well, even on Twelfth Night. Lear, King John, and Much Ado, Henry 4, parts 1 and 2, Henry 5, and 6 (in three parts), Henry 8, Troilus, Timon, Measure for Measure, Pericles (a neglected treasure) and how Romeo and Juliet met their fate; all the Sonnets, and the **** of Lucrece* (typed by an ape!) and if they worked for ever and a day they could fit in Julius Caesar, that Coriolanus geezer, the Wives of Windsor, and the Scottish play. I grew more and more excited – even thought I might be knighted if I could be the one to make it work. But to realise my dream I had to try a pilot scheme, to prove I wasn’t just a reckless berk. I bought one chimp from the zoo - didn't have the cash for two - and gave him a typewriter, just to try for a short while. Well, a fortnight was the time-scale that I thought right. You see, I’m quite an optimistic guy. Now everyone who heard of my project said, “Absurd!” when I told them of my striking new departure. “Get a chimpanzee to type the works of Shakespeare? Oh, what tripe!” Still … he did produce the works of Jeffrey Archer.
0
Jan 18, 2016
Jan 18, 2016 at 3:55 PM UTC
Testing a Theory
Take a group of chimpanzees used to swinging through the trees, and sit them down at keyboards in a row; lots of paper, lots of ink, lots and lots of time, I think, and what the theory says I’m sure you know. Yes, along with all the junk, all the gibberish and bunk, somewhere there’d be the full works of the Bard: As You Like It, Cymbeline, Richards 2 and 3, the Dream, though Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, might be hard. But I’m sure the little blighters would get on fine with *Titus Andronicus*, The Taming of the Shrew, The Moor of Venice (that’s Othello), the other Merchant fellow, and Antony and Cleopatra too. The Winter’s Tale would hold no terrors, nor The Comedy of Errors, and Verona’s Gentlemen would turn out right; Love’s Labour might be Lost, or it might be Tempest-tossed, but All’s Well That Ends Well, even on Twelfth Night. Lear, King John, and Much Ado, Henry 4, parts 1 and 2, Henry 5, and 6 (in three parts), Henry 8, Troilus, Timon, Measure for Measure, Pericles (a neglected treasure) and how Romeo and Juliet met their fate; all the Sonnets, and the **** of Lucrece* (typed by an ape!) and if they worked for ever and a day they could fit in Julius Caesar, that Coriolanus geezer, the Wives of Windsor, and the Scottish play. I grew more and more excited – even thought I might be knighted if I could be the one to make it work. But to realise my dream I had to try a pilot scheme, to prove I wasn’t just a reckless berk. I bought one chimp from the zoo - didn't have the cash for two - and gave him a typewriter, just to try for a short while. Well, a fortnight was the time-scale that I thought right. You see, I’m quite an optimistic guy. Now everyone who heard of my project said, “Absurd!” when I told them of my striking new departure. “Get a chimpanzee to type the works of Shakespeare? Oh, what tripe!” Still … he did produce the works of Jeffrey Archer.
Jeffrey Archer in Wikipedia: Whilst Archer's books are commercially successful, critics have been generally unfavourable towards his writing. On another topic, in 2001, Archer was found guilty of perjury and perverting the course of justice. He was sentenced to four years' imprisonment. (More details if you read the article.)
paul-hansford
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Jan 18, 2016
Jan 18, 2016 at 3:55 PM UTC
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