Well, I'll tell you this: Romeo and Juliet are not necessarily people. And kasie's idea about the train is correct, but there's no poison.
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Well, I'll tell you this: Romeo and Juliet are not necessarily people. And kasie's idea about the train is correct, but there's no poison.
For some reason I'm getting this idea of a skylight covered in snow (seasonal) which came crashing in, the snow melting causing water and a slipping mishap
I'm also getting the idea that the train caused it, and that the shelf was used to climb - or perch on - it
Rom or Jul a bird?
Jul or Rom a cat?
Nopers. Try again.
Does 'not necessarily be people' mean that there's an equal chance that they are, in fact and effect, people?
Is the glass important?
Hold on - are they chimpanzees, monkeys, or similar (as distinguished from being fully 'like us' ?
They are not people and nothing like people, to be more clear. The glass is important.
Mice? Cockroaches?
Could you just tell me quickly if I've been moving so far away from what Kasie thought was reasonable, it's prepoposterous?
Heh, you're not even close. If the glass had not broken, R and J would be alive.
R and J were in the glass vase? Or on the skylight - though you seemed to indicate that that's not the case...
You must tell me what exactly R and J were. And no to the skylight.
GOLDFISH!!!
In a GOLDFISH BOWL!!!
phew! at last.
I's got two legs from me hips
To the ground, and when I
Moves 'em they walks around,
And when I lifts 'em they climb
The stairs, and when I shaves
'Em they ain't got hairs
Who is I?
Just Googled 'I's got two legs'
It came up Terry Gilliam
So that was pretty ****weak
wasn't it?
I'm looking at limb like shaped letters in certain words.
Also this "I" character is significant, I think.
No, Mick, sorry, bad news, the problem is, in fact, wrong. I was told by a tea drinking B.S.er (the tea drinking's irrelevant - except he B.S.ed me about the milk getting scolded if you put it in last)* that the answer was Margaret Thatcher.
It never occurred to me to research the origin of the thing until now. I knew it was Monty Python, and the insoucient way he dropped the 'bombshell' at an impressionable age gave me no reason to doubt it.
So it seems it actually appeared in the Papperbok originally, and later performed by Gilliam on stage, neither with the Who am/is I? additition
The explanation, if you can call it that, was to do with the layout of No 10 as featured in Yes, Prime Minister.
I'll come up with something better, or hopefully someone else will (hint hint), when I find something gooder
*I have only suspicion, but as I'm yet to hear this from anyone else, I am prepared to be corrected