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  1. Though to itself, it only live and die, But if that flower with base infection meet, The basest weed outbraves his dignity: For sweetest things turn sourest by their deeds; Lilies that fester, smell far worse than weeds.

  2. www.smithsonianmag.com › smart-news › did-shakespeare-smoke-pot-180956223Did Shakespeare Smoke Pot? | Smithsonian

    Four pipes found at an excavation site in Shakespeare's back garden bore a chemical signature similar to that of cannabis. The results were not conclusive. There’s no evidence that...

  3. ‘Sonnet 66’ by William Shakespeare is a dark and depressing poem that expresses the speaker’s irritation and exhaustion with the world. Throughout the fourteen lines of this poem, the speaker takes the reader through the numerous things that he is tired of in his life.

  4. ‘Sonnet 30’ by William Shakespeare describes the speaker’s most depressed state and what it is that finally lifts him out of it and relieves his sorrows. The poem is directed to the Fair Youth and chronicles the various things that bring the speaker to tears when he starts thinking about the past.

  5. 10 sie 2015 · Some scholars suggest that the Bard may have smoked marijuana for inspiration, but others are skeptical.

  6. 7 sie 2015 · Shakespeare may have been aware of the deleterious effects of cocaine as a strange compound. Possibly, he preferred cannabis as a weed with mind-stimulating properties.

  7. 14 sie 2015 · The New Yorker has found Shakespeare's lost weed sonnets? Something like that. They quote The Telegraph: "South African scientists have discovered that 400-year-old tobacco pipes excavated...

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