Inday,
“Where fort art thou?”- in the words of Juliet in the infamous play,”Romeo and Juliet” by of course, the greatest playwright of all time, William Shakespeare. Though I am not a Juliet, I chose these words to put into words of what my heart is screaming to say to you my dear Inday.
Inday, you know from the very moment my eyes laid on you beautiful smile, my world stopped. My heart can’t stop from hyperventilating as I stare at you while you are sweeping the Montemayor’s front yard. I can’t sleep as i think the way your hair flows as you chase Junior when you’d be giving him a bath.
Oh my Inday, I pray that we would last until the end of all eternity. As your superior intellect overpowers my inferiority, it doesn’t matter.
As long as our love is strong and our determination to face all the hindrance of our relationship, I, Dodong, will never, ever give up.
Lovingly yours,
-Dodong
bakit “infamous” ang romeo and juliet?
that what you call irony!
the use of irony in describing the play, romeo and juliet, as “infamous” is misplaced. nowhere in the whole entry can you find justification for it.
my take is that, the writer erred. He or she must have meant “famous” instead of “infamous.”
i don’t think infamous is the opposite of famous
infamous,
(a.) Causing or producing infamy; deserving detestation; scandalous to the last degree; as, an infamous act; infamous vices; infamous corruption.
romeo and juliet can be considered a scandalous play.
one of my co-professors got angry at being called “infamous” by a student, too. turns out the student meant “famous.”
so since this is dodong we’re talking about, i’m assuming he meant “famous.”
well said calvin..
(“in the words of Juliet in the infamous play,”Romeo and Juliet”) i Believe dodong is talking about the play …
FYI: Infamous also means:
Well-known, recognized, renowned, legendary