Heh, I did try to include the bear when I drew this sketch in class, but it came out more like a blob, so I didn't even attempt it in the Windows Paint version.
Oh, a baby carriage! I was totally going with the brother under the oak (though, of course, the bright red fruit should have told me otherwise) finding bit.
I agree with Ceirsearch, we need a bear! Or maybe a ship foundering in the background? Lederhosen? (For Bohemia, you know, though I have no idea how one would represent lederhosen!)
Well, this is my illustration for Act 4, so technically the bear, the baby carriage and the ship would have been long gone anyway :) The bright red fruit was my best attempt to illustrate grafting (hence the awkwardly-sticking-out branch with the bigger fruit on it).
Heya. I teach Shakespeare, British lit, and some other stuff. I am an associate professor at a small public university in the South, here known as Misnomer U; I spent a year in a visiting position at a private liberal-arts college that I call New SLAC. I hold degrees from the Beloved Alma Mater (undergrad) and the University of Basketball (grad). This blog contains teaching anecdotes, occasional posts about whatever I'm reading, and random thoughts.
4 comments:
I have to say, at this point, because it's far too tranquil and unsuspecting...
Exit hurriedly, pursued by a bear.
Heh, I did try to include the bear when I drew this sketch in class, but it came out more like a blob, so I didn't even attempt it in the Windows Paint version.
Oh, a baby carriage! I was totally going with the brother under the oak (though, of course, the bright red fruit should have told me otherwise) finding bit.
I agree with Ceirsearch, we need a bear! Or maybe a ship foundering in the background? Lederhosen? (For Bohemia, you know, though I have no idea how one would represent lederhosen!)
Brilliant!
Well, this is my illustration for Act 4, so technically the bear, the baby carriage and the ship would have been long gone anyway :) The bright red fruit was my best attempt to illustrate grafting (hence the awkwardly-sticking-out branch with the bigger fruit on it).
Post a Comment