What a piece of work are birds: Difference between revisions
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File:What_a_piece_of_work_are_birds.jpg | File:What_a_piece_of_work_are_birds.jpg|What a piece of work are birds. | ||
File:Shakespeare-Magellan_Expedition.jpg|link=Shakespeare-Magellan Expedition|The [[Shakespeare-Magellan Expedition|Shakespeare-Magellan high-energy literature experiment]] will re-route Shakespeare's quantum timeline such that the Bard produces his entire body of historical work while serving as a Liberal Arts adjunct to Magellan's Expedition. | File:Shakespeare-Magellan_Expedition.jpg|link=Shakespeare-Magellan Expedition|The [[Shakespeare-Magellan Expedition|Shakespeare-Magellan high-energy literature experiment]] will re-route Shakespeare's quantum timeline such that the Bard produces his entire body of historical work while serving as a Liberal Arts adjunct to Magellan's Expedition. |
Revision as of 18:19, 5 March 2021
"What a piece of work are birds!" is a phrase from within a monologue by an anonymous contemporary of William Shakespeare.
The speech
What a piece of work are birds! How noble in saturation, how infinite in hue! In spectral absorption and reflection how express and admirable ... the beauty of the air ... the paragon of visual stimuli!
History
It was detected and partially decrypted by software developer and APTO-certified fabulist Karl Jones on the afternoon of Thursday, 4 February 2021, in a post on Twitter.
In the News
The Shakespeare-Magellan high-energy literature experiment will re-route Shakespeare's quantum timeline such that the Bard produces his entire body of historical work while serving as a Liberal Arts adjunct to Magellan's Expedition.
Fiction cross-reference
Nonfiction cross-reference
External links
- Post @ Twitter
- Post @ Twitter
- What a piece of work is man @ Wikipedia