2011-04-12
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2011-04-12 |
Title text: 2011-04-12 |
Votey[edit]
Explanation[edit]
This explanation is either missing or incomplete. |
Transcript[edit]
This transcript was generated by a bot: The text was scraped using AWS's Textract, which may have errors. Complete transcripts describe what happens in each panel — here are some good examples to get you started (1) (2). |
- [Describe panel here]
- Shakespeare's hamlet is based on an older danish legend about a prince named amleth.
- The stories are extremely similar, the major difference being the ending.
- Main character's uncle kills his father and
- marries his mother.
- Main character acts weird to avoid
- suspicion.
- King tries to kill main character by sending him away with two men.
- Main character returns to kill king.
- Hamlet suffers a tragic death on laertes' poison sword after a long period of indecision and mental anguish.
- If thou didst ever hold me in thy heart absent thee from felicity a while and in this harsh world draw thy breath
- In pain
- To tell
- My story.
- Amleth nets his enemies in giant wall hangings, lights them on fire, and becomes king.
- Burn bitches burn! Nobody expectsnets:
- Hahaha
- I like to imagine a hybrid where we get the best of both worlds.
- To be or not to be. That is the oh wait. Wait a minute. I'll just net these fuckers!
Votey Transcript[edit]
This transcript was generated by a bot: The text was scraped using AWS's Textract, which may have errors. Complete transcripts describe what happens in each panel — here are some good examples to get you started (1) (2). |
- [Describe panel here]
- "the net's the thing in which I'll roast the carcass of the king:
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