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Brush up your Shakespeare

08 April 2022 / Nicholas Dobson
Issue: 7974 / Categories: Features , Profession
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Shakespearean lawyers, Kiss me Kate & Vladimir Putin: Nicholas Dobson considers whether the human condition is any different 400 years on

Shakespeare, of course, never said: ‘The first thing we do, let’s kill all the lawyers.’ That was just one of his characters, Yorkist rebel, Dick the Butcher in Henry VI Part 2. For the Bard, with a sure touch on every nuance of the human condition, had a deep understanding of the ‘infinite variety’ of character. And that includes artful lawyerly language. So, when Hamlet, examining graveyard bones (as you do) along with his friend, Horatio, noticed a lawyer’s skull, he wondered what happened to all the deceased’s smart forensic antics: ‘Where be his quiddities now [the essential nature of something], his quillets, [subtle distinctions] his cases, his tenures, and his tricks?’

But since the gangsters in Cole Porter’s Kiss Me Kate insisted we: ‘Brush up [our] Shakespeare’, I thought I better had. So I’ve written a detailed explanatory guide to Richard II, Henry IV Parts 1 and 2 and Henry

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NEWS
Tech companies will be legally required to prevent material that encourages or assists serious self-harm appearing on their platforms, under Online Safety Act 2023 regulations due to come into force in the autumn
Commercial leasehold, the defence of insanity and ‘consent’ in the criminal law are among the next tranche of projects for the Law Commission
The Bar has a culture of ‘impunity’ and ‘collusive bystanding’ in which making a complaint is deemed career-ending due to a ‘cohort of untouchables’ at the top, Baroness Harriet Harman KC has found
Lawyers have broadly welcomed plans to electronically tag up to 22,000 more offenders, scrap most prison terms below a year and make prisoners ‘earn’ early release
David Lammy, Ellie Reeves and Baroness Levitt have taken up office at the Ministry of Justice, following the cabinet reshuffle
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