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{{Use British English|date=December 2024}}
{{Use British English|date=December 2024}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2024}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2024}}
[[File:Between the Quick and the Dead (Punch, 1890-11-22).jpg|thumb|upright=1.25|The cartoon "Between the Quick and the Dead" ([[Punch (magazine)|''Punch'' magazine]], 22 November 1890) depicts a British officer imploring the figure of [[Justice (mythology)|Justice]] beside the graves of the army officer [[Edmund Musgrave Barttelot]] and the naturalist [[James Sligo Jameson]], over their roles in the [[Emin Pasha Relief Expedition]].<ref name="Punch 1890"/> ]]
[[File:Between the Quick and the Dead (Punch, 1890-11-22).jpg|thumb|upright=1.25|The cartoon "Between the Quick and the Dead" ([[Punch (magazine)|''Punch'' magazine]], 22 November 1890) depicts a British officer imploring the figure of [[Justice (mythology)|Justice]] beside the graves of the army officer [[Edmund Musgrave Barttelot]] and the naturalist [[James Sligo Jameson]], over their roles in the [[Emin Pasha Relief Expedition]].<ref name="Punch 1890">{{cite news |title=Between the Quick and the Dead |work=[[Punch (magazine)]] |date=22 November 1890}}</ref>]]


'''The quick and the dead''' is an English phrase used in the paraphrase of the Creed in the Medieval Lay Folks Mass Book<ref>Early English Text Society 1879 pp20-21</ref> and is found in [[William Tyndale]]'s English translation of the [[New Testament]] (1526), "I testifie therfore before god and before the lorde Iesu Christ which shall iudge quicke and deed at his aperynge in his kyngdom" ([[2 Timothy 4]]:1),<ref name="Tyndale">{{cite web |url=http://www.faithofgod.net/WTNT/2_timothy_4.html |website=FaithOfGod.net |title=2 Timothy 4}}</ref> and used by [[Thomas Cranmer]] in his translation of the [[Nicene Creed]] and [[Apostles' Creed]] for the first [[Book of Common Prayer (1549)|first ''Book of Common Prayer'']] in 1549.<ref name="Prayer Book">{{cite web |website=The Book of Common Prayer |url=http://justus.anglican.org/resources/bcp/1549/BCP_1549.htm |title=The Book of Common Prayer - 1549: The First Book of Common Prayer}}</ref> In the following century the idiom was used both by [[Shakespeare]]'s ''[[Hamlet]]'' (1603) and the [[King James Bible]] (1611). More recently the final verse of [[The Book of Mormon]] (1830), mentions "...the Eternal Judge of both quick and dead".<ref>''[[Book of Moroni]]'' chapter 10 verse 34</ref>
'''The quick and the dead''' is an English phrase used in the paraphrase of the Creed in the Medieval Lay Folks Mass Book<ref>Early English Text Society 1879 pp20-21</ref> and is found in [[William Tyndale]]'s English translation of the [[New Testament]] (1526), "I testifie therfore before god and before the lorde Iesu Christ which shall iudge quicke and deed at his aperynge in his kyngdom" ([[2 Timothy 4]]:1),<ref name="Tyndale">{{cite web |url=http://www.faithofgod.net/WTNT/2_timothy_4.html |website=FaithOfGod.net |title=2 Timothy 4}}</ref> and used by [[Thomas Cranmer]] in his translation of the [[Nicene Creed]] and [[Apostles' Creed]] for the first [[Book of Common Prayer (1549)|first ''Book of Common Prayer'']] in 1549.<ref name="Prayer Book">{{cite web |website=The Book of Common Prayer |url=http://justus.anglican.org/resources/bcp/1549/BCP_1549.htm |title=The Book of Common Prayer - 1549: The First Book of Common Prayer}}</ref> In the following century the idiom was used both by [[Shakespeare]]'s ''[[Hamlet]]'' (1603) and the [[King James Bible]] (1611). More recently the final verse of [[The Book of Mormon]] (1830), mentions "...the Eternal Judge of both quick and dead".<ref>''[[Book of Moroni]]'' chapter 10 verse 34</ref>


The phrase has been used both in its original sense in the titles of books and films, and sometimes ambiguously with the modern sense of the word "quick" for tales of speed and deadly danger.
The phrase has been used both in its original sense in the titles of books and films, and sometimes ambiguously with the modern sense of the word "quick" for tales of speed and deadly danger.
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The phrase is found in three passages in the 1611 [[King James Bible]]: in the [[Acts of the Apostles]] ([[Acts 10]]:42), [[Timothy 2|Paul's letters to Timothy]] (2 Timothy 4:1), and [[the First Epistle of Peter]]. The last reads: "For the time past of our life may suffice us to have wrought the will of the Gentiles, when we walked in lasciviousness, lusts, excess of wine, revellings, banquetings, and abominable idolatries: Wherein they think it strange that ye run not with them to the same excess of riot, speaking evil of you: Who shall give account to him that is ready to judge the quick and the dead".<ref>1 Peter 4:3–5</ref>
The phrase is found in three passages in the 1611 [[King James Bible]]: in the [[Acts of the Apostles]] ([[Acts 10]]:42), [[Timothy 2|Paul's letters to Timothy]] (2 Timothy 4:1), and [[the First Epistle of Peter]]. The last reads: "For the time past of our life may suffice us to have wrought the will of the Gentiles, when we walked in lasciviousness, lusts, excess of wine, revellings, banquetings, and abominable idolatries: Wherein they think it strange that ye run not with them to the same excess of riot, speaking evil of you: Who shall give account to him that is ready to judge the quick and the dead".<ref>1 Peter 4:3–5</ref>

This passage advises the reader of the perils of following outsiders in not obeying [[God in Christianity|God]]'s will. Specifically it warns that those who [[sin]], both ''the quick and the dead'', will be judged by [[Jesus Christ]]. In other words, it implies that God is able to act on the sins of a person whether that person is alive (''quick'') or has passed into the [[afterlife]] (''dead'').


=== In the Nicene and Apostles' Creeds ===
=== In the Nicene and Apostles' Creeds ===
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This phrase occurs in [[Shakespeare]]'s [[Shakespearean tragedy|tragedy]] ''[[Hamlet]]'', when Ophelia's brother, Laertes, at the burial of his sister, [[Ophelia]], asks the gravedigger to hold off throwing earth onto Ophelia's body and jumps into her grave and says, "Now pile your dust upon the quick and the dead . . . " (line 5.1.240). Laertes is "quick" (i.e., alive), and Ophelia is dead. The scene dramatizes the extreme passion of Laertes. A play on the expression comes earlier in the same scene, when Hamlet asks a gravedigger whose grave is being dug, and the gravedigger, designated as CLOWN, uses a pun on the word, "lie," and playfully evades Hamlet's question. Hamlet's reply includes the line, "'tis for the dead, not for the quick . . ." (line 5.1.118).
This phrase occurs in [[Shakespeare]]'s [[Shakespearean tragedy|tragedy]] ''[[Hamlet]]'', when Ophelia's brother, Laertes, at the burial of his sister, [[Ophelia]], asks the gravedigger to hold off throwing earth onto Ophelia's body and jumps into her grave and says, "Now pile your dust upon the quick and the dead . . . " (line 5.1.240). Laertes is "quick" (i.e., alive), and Ophelia is dead. The scene dramatizes the extreme passion of Laertes. A play on the expression comes earlier in the same scene, when Hamlet asks a gravedigger whose grave is being dug, and the gravedigger, designated as CLOWN, uses a pun on the word, "lie," and playfully evades Hamlet's question. Hamlet's reply includes the line, "'tis for the dead, not for the quick . . ." (line 5.1.118).

The poignance of the expression is that it comes from Christian tradition that Christ will judge "the quick and the dead," and because Ophelia's death by drowning is "doubtful," according to the priest at the interment. Was her death an accident or suicide? The priest thinks she should not have a [[Christian burial]], but apparently the King overruled that judgment, so she is given a partial Christian burial. According to the report of her death given by the Queen, Ophelia "fell" into the stream, but because of her insanity, she kept singing strange songs and didn't try to save herself.

=== Emin Pasha Relief Expedition ===

{{further|Emin Pasha Relief Expedition}}

The 1887 to 1889 [[Emin Pasha Relief Expedition]] became notorious for causing the deaths of many of its members and for its reported brutality.<ref name="Jeal 2007">{{cite book |last=Jeal |first=Tim |author-link=Tim Jeal |title=Stanley: The Impossible Life of Africa's Greatest Explorer |date=2007 |publisher=Yale University Press |location=New Haven |pages=357–358}}</ref> The conduct of two of its members, the army officer [[Edmund Musgrave Barttelot]] and the naturalist [[James Sligo Jameson]], is thought to have led [[Joseph Conrad]] to create the brutal character [[Kurtz (Heart of Darkness)|Kurtz]] in his 1899 novella ''[[Heart of Darkness]]''.<ref name="Edgerton 2002">{{cite book |last=Edgerton |first=Robert B. |title=The Troubled Heart of Africa: A History of the Congo |date=2002 |publisher=St. Martin's Press |location=New York |pp=71–72}}</ref> The same two members featured in a cartoon in [[Punch (magazine)|''Punch'' magazine]] in 1890, showing a living British officer imploring the figure of [[Justice (mythology)|Justice]] beside the two men's graves, under the caption "Between the Quick and the Dead".<ref name="Punch 1890">{{cite news |title=Between the Quick and the Dead |work=[[Punch (magazine)]] |date=22 November 1890}}</ref>


=== In fiction ===
=== In fiction ===


Several books and films have been made using the idiom as their title. The books include a 1943 work by [[Ellery Queen]], a 1956 book by [[Bill Waterton]], a 1973 novel by [[Louis L'Amour]] involving a gunfight and a tale of revenge,<ref>{{allMovie title|39879}}</ref> a 1991 book by [[George Grant (author)|George Grant]], and a 2002 novel by [[Joy Williams (American writer)|Joy Williams]]. [[Robert Heinlein]]'s 2016 short story "The Roads Must Roll" tells that "It was not physically possible to drive safely in those crowded metropolises. Pedestrians were sardonically divided into two classes, the quick, and the dead."<ref>{{cite web |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161013175336/http://cuentoshistoriasdelmundo.blogspot.com/2016/02/future-history-series-03-roads-must.html |website=Cento Historias del Mundo |date=27 February 2016 |title=Future History Series 03 - The Roads Must Roll |first=Robert A. |last=Heinlein |author-link=Robert Heinlein |accessdate=2 December 2024}}</ref>
Several books and films have been made using the idiom as their title. The books include a 1943 work by [[Ellery Queen]], a 1956 book by [[Bill Waterton]], a 1973 novel by [[Louis L'Amour]] involving a gunfight and a tale of revenge,{{cn|date=December 2024}} a 1991 book by [[George Grant (author)|George Grant]], and a 2002 novel by [[Joy Williams (American writer)|Joy Williams]]. [[Robert Heinlein]]'s 2016 short story "The Roads Must Roll" tells that "It was not physically possible to drive safely in those crowded metropolises. Pedestrians were sardonically divided into two classes, the quick, and the dead."<ref>{{cite web |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161013175336/http://cuentoshistoriasdelmundo.blogspot.com/2016/02/future-history-series-03-roads-must.html |website=Cento Historias del Mundo |date=27 February 2016 |title=Future History Series 03 - The Roads Must Roll |first=Robert A. |last=Heinlein |author-link=Robert Heinlein |accessdate=2 December 2024}}</ref>


The films include [[The Quick and the Dead (1963 film)|a 1963 war film]] by [[Robert Totten]],<ref>{{cite book |publisher=[[Turner Classic Movies]] |title=The Quick and the Dead |date=1963 |url=http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title/87480/The-Quick-and-the-Dead/}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jcrTDwAAQBAJ&q=Victor+French+as+Milo+Riley&pg=PT21 |title=From Hell To Hollywood: An Encyclopedia of World War II Films |first=Douglas |last=Brode |publisher=BearManor Media |location=[[Albany, Georgia]] |year=2020 |isbn=978-1629335216}}</ref> [[The Quick and the Dead (1978 film)|a 1978 documentary]] about the deadly danger of motor racing, where 'quick' is taken in both the modern and the original sense,<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.grandamerican.com/Messageboard/ShowPosts.asp?ID=4152&Page=Last |title=Archived copy |access-date=2006-09-21 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080215081704/http://www.grandamerican.com/Messageboard/ShowPosts.asp?ID=4152&Page=Last |archive-date=2008-02-15 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.vtmotorbooks.com/books/profile_cl.shtml?index=VTDVD2901&srchret=browse_cat%3Dformula_one_and_grand_prix%26browse%3DBrowse |title=Green Mountain Motorbooks|publisher=|accessdate=19 May 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150521160945/http://www.vtmotorbooks.com/books/profile_cl.shtml?index=VTDVD2901&srchret=browse_cat%3Dformula_one_and_grand_prix%26browse%3DBrowse|archive-date=21 May 2015|url-status=dead}}</ref> and a [[The Quick and the Dead (1987 film)|1987 television film]] by [[Robert Day (director)|Robert Day]] based on L'Amour's novel.<ref>{{allMovie title|39879}}</ref> [[Sam Raimi]]'s 1995 film ''[[The Quick and the Dead (1995 film)|The Quick and the Dead]]'' tells the story of a female gunfighter who rides into a frontier town and joins a deadly [[duel]]ling competition to seek revenge for her father's death; here, 'quick' means both "quick on the draw" and "alive".<ref name="Martin">{{cite web |last=Martin |first=Gary |title=The quick and the dead |url=https://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/quick-and-the-dead.html |website=Phrases.org.uk |access-date=2 December 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last=Maslin |first=Janet |author-link=Janet Maslin |title=The Quick and the Dead |work=[[The New York Times]] |date=10 February 1995}}</ref>
The films include [[The Quick and the Dead (1963 film)|a 1963 war film]] by [[Robert Totten]],<ref>{{cite book |publisher=[[Turner Classic Movies]] |title=The Quick and the Dead |date=1963 |url=http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title/87480/The-Quick-and-the-Dead/}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jcrTDwAAQBAJ&q=Victor+French+as+Milo+Riley&pg=PT21 |title=From Hell To Hollywood: An Encyclopedia of World War II Films |first=Douglas |last=Brode |publisher=BearManor Media |location=[[Albany, Georgia]] |year=2020 |isbn=978-1629335216}}</ref> [[The Quick and the Dead (1978 film)|a 1978 documentary]] about the deadly danger of motor racing, where 'quick' is taken in both the modern and the original sense,<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.grandamerican.com/Messageboard/ShowPosts.asp?ID=4152&Page=Last |title=Archived copy |access-date=2006-09-21 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080215081704/http://www.grandamerican.com/Messageboard/ShowPosts.asp?ID=4152&Page=Last |archive-date=2008-02-15 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.vtmotorbooks.com/books/profile_cl.shtml?index=VTDVD2901&srchret=browse_cat%3Dformula_one_and_grand_prix%26browse%3DBrowse |title=Green Mountain Motorbooks|publisher=|accessdate=19 May 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150521160945/http://www.vtmotorbooks.com/books/profile_cl.shtml?index=VTDVD2901&srchret=browse_cat%3Dformula_one_and_grand_prix%26browse%3DBrowse|archive-date=21 May 2015|url-status=dead}}</ref> and a [[The Quick and the Dead (1987 film)|1987 television film]] by [[Robert Day (director)|Robert Day]] based on L'Amour's novel.{{cn|date=December 2024}} [[Sam Raimi]]'s 1995 film ''[[The Quick and the Dead (1995 film)|The Quick and the Dead]]'' tells the story of a female gunfighter who rides into a frontier town and joins a deadly [[duel]]ling competition to seek revenge for her father's death; here, 'quick' means both "quick on the draw" and "alive".<ref name="Martin">{{cite web |last=Martin |first=Gary |title=The quick and the dead |url=https://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/quick-and-the-dead.html |website=Phrases.org.uk |access-date=2 December 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last=Maslin |first=Janet |author-link=Janet Maslin |title=The Quick and the Dead |work=[[The New York Times]] |date=10 February 1995}}</ref>


In 2022, under the same title, the British [[Fine-art photography|fine-art photographer]] [[David Yarrow]] made a photograph on the theme of the gun-toting visitor to a [[Wild West]] town, using a cast of 120 people "near the Crazy Mountain at the old Marlboro Ranch in Montana".<ref>{{cite web |last1=Yarrow |first1=David |author1-link=David Yarrow |title=The Quick and the Dead |url=https://davidyarrow.photography/collections/the-quick-and-the-dead |website=Yarrow |access-date=2 December 2024 |location=Crazy Mountain Ranch, Montana |date=2022}}</ref>
In 2022, under the same title, the British [[Fine-art photography|fine-art photographer]] [[David Yarrow]] made a photograph on the theme of the gun-toting visitor to a [[Wild West]] town, using a cast of 120 people "near the Crazy Mountain at the old Marlboro Ranch in Montana".<ref>{{cite web |last1=Yarrow |first1=David |author1-link=David Yarrow |title=The Quick and the Dead |url=https://davidyarrow.photography/collections/the-quick-and-the-dead |website=Yarrow |access-date=2 December 2024 |location=Crazy Mountain Ranch, Montana |date=2022}}</ref>
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Joan Douglas Peters, analysing the novelist [[D. H. Lawrence]]'s theory of literary genres, notes that he defines genres as either "quick" or "dead", and that he uses the "quick and the dead" opposition not metaphorically but "as simple, literal description".<ref name="Peters 2000"/> That is despite his metaphorical definition of "quick" as "the God-flame in everything".<ref name="Peters 2000"/> In her view, Lawrence finds no contradiction between "the use of metaphor and the expression of literal truth."<ref name="Peters 2000"/> Peters comments that Lawrence satirizes the religious phrase, but makes use of it all the same, as if to try to prove that "categorical statements should not be taken categorically."<ref name="Peters 2000">{{cite journal |last=Peters |first=Joan Douglas |title=Rhetoric as Idea: D. H. Lawrence's Genre Theory |journal=Style |volume=34 |issue=1 |date=2000 |pages=36–51 |jstor=10.5325/style.34.1.36}}</ref>
Joan Douglas Peters, analysing the novelist [[D. H. Lawrence]]'s theory of literary genres, notes that he defines genres as either "quick" or "dead", and that he uses the "quick and the dead" opposition not metaphorically but "as simple, literal description".<ref name="Peters 2000"/> That is despite his metaphorical definition of "quick" as "the God-flame in everything".<ref name="Peters 2000"/> In her view, Lawrence finds no contradiction between "the use of metaphor and the expression of literal truth."<ref name="Peters 2000"/> Peters comments that Lawrence satirizes the religious phrase, but makes use of it all the same, as if to try to prove that "categorical statements should not be taken categorically."<ref name="Peters 2000">{{cite journal |last=Peters |first=Joan Douglas |title=Rhetoric as Idea: D. H. Lawrence's Genre Theory |journal=Style |volume=34 |issue=1 |date=2000 |pages=36–51 |jstor=10.5325/style.34.1.36}}</ref>

Michelle Toumayants, describing Melvin B. Tolson's use of a mass of proverbs occupying 84 lines of the text of his poetic ''Libretto'', writes that these give the reader insight into the suffering of slaves of African origin: "''[[Griot]]s'', the quick owe the quick and the dead. A man owes man to man!" while the character representing Europe denies that Africa has a history: {{lang|fr|Seule de tous les continents...l'Afrique n'a pas d'histoire}}.<ref name="Toumayants 2007"/> In her view, the "unrelenting, metered, pithy proverbs" are for Tolson "the poetry of the Africans, their art, their music, their culture" as spoken by the "poet-warrior ''griot''".<ref name="Toumayants 2007">{{cite journal |last=Toumayants |first=Michelle |title=Poetic Proverbs, African Advocacy, and Melvin B. Tolson |journal=Comparative Humanities Review |volume=1 |issue=1 |year=2007 |pages=6–12 |url=https://digitalcommons.bucknell.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1002&context=chr}}</ref>


== References ==
== References ==

Latest revision as of 20:20, 23 December 2024

The cartoon "Between the Quick and the Dead" (Punch magazine, 22 November 1890) depicts a British officer imploring the figure of Justice beside the graves of the army officer Edmund Musgrave Barttelot and the naturalist James Sligo Jameson, over their roles in the Emin Pasha Relief Expedition.[1]

The quick and the dead is an English phrase used in the paraphrase of the Creed in the Medieval Lay Folks Mass Book[2] and is found in William Tyndale's English translation of the New Testament (1526), "I testifie therfore before god and before the lorde Iesu Christ which shall iudge quicke and deed at his aperynge in his kyngdom" (2 Timothy 4:1),[3] and used by Thomas Cranmer in his translation of the Nicene Creed and Apostles' Creed for the first first Book of Common Prayer in 1549.[4] In the following century the idiom was used both by Shakespeare's Hamlet (1603) and the King James Bible (1611). More recently the final verse of The Book of Mormon (1830), mentions "...the Eternal Judge of both quick and dead".[5]

The phrase has been used both in its original sense in the titles of books and films, and sometimes ambiguously with the modern sense of the word "quick" for tales of speed and deadly danger.

Etymology

[edit]

The use of the word quick in this context is an archaic one, specifically meaning living or alive; therefore, this idiom concerns 'the living and the dead'. The meaning of "quick" in this way is still retained in various common phrases, such as the "quick" of the fingernails,[6] and in the idiom quickening, as the moment in pregnancy when fetal movements are first felt.[7]) Another common phrase, "cut to the quick", literally means cut through the dead, unfeeling layers of the skin to the living, sensitive tissues below.[8] It is derived from the Proto-Germanic *kwikwaz, which in turn was from a variant of the Proto-Indo-European form *gwih3wos – "lively, alive", from the root *gweih3 "(to) live" (from which also comes the Latin vivere and later the Italian and Spanish viva, and whose root is retained in the English words revive and survive). The English meaning of "quick" in later centuries shifted to "fast", "rapid", "moving, or able to move, with speed".[6] The old sense of the word as "alive" survives in "quicksand" (which moves), "quicklime" (which seethes and bubbles),[9] and "quicksilver", an old name for the liquid metal mercury, which runs around and quivers as if alive.[10]

Primary religious origins

[edit]

In the King James Bible

[edit]

The phrase is found in three passages in the 1611 King James Bible: in the Acts of the Apostles (Acts 10:42), Paul's letters to Timothy (2 Timothy 4:1), and the First Epistle of Peter. The last reads: "For the time past of our life may suffice us to have wrought the will of the Gentiles, when we walked in lasciviousness, lusts, excess of wine, revellings, banquetings, and abominable idolatries: Wherein they think it strange that ye run not with them to the same excess of riot, speaking evil of you: Who shall give account to him that is ready to judge the quick and the dead".[11]

In the Nicene and Apostles' Creeds

[edit]

In the Nicene Creed the phrase appears in the following passage (taken from the 1662 Book of Common Prayer):[4]

[He] ascended into heaven,
And sitteth on the right hand of the Father.
And he shall come again with glory to judge both the quick and the dead.

In the Apostles' Creed the phrase appears in the following passage (also from the 1662 Book of Common Prayer):[4]

He ascended into heaven,
And sitteth on the right hand of God the Father Almighty;
From thence he shall come to judge the quick and the dead.

Other uses

[edit]

Shakespeare's Hamlet

[edit]

This phrase occurs in Shakespeare's tragedy Hamlet, when Ophelia's brother, Laertes, at the burial of his sister, Ophelia, asks the gravedigger to hold off throwing earth onto Ophelia's body and jumps into her grave and says, "Now pile your dust upon the quick and the dead . . . " (line 5.1.240). Laertes is "quick" (i.e., alive), and Ophelia is dead. The scene dramatizes the extreme passion of Laertes. A play on the expression comes earlier in the same scene, when Hamlet asks a gravedigger whose grave is being dug, and the gravedigger, designated as CLOWN, uses a pun on the word, "lie," and playfully evades Hamlet's question. Hamlet's reply includes the line, "'tis for the dead, not for the quick . . ." (line 5.1.118).

In fiction

[edit]

Several books and films have been made using the idiom as their title. The books include a 1943 work by Ellery Queen, a 1956 book by Bill Waterton, a 1973 novel by Louis L'Amour involving a gunfight and a tale of revenge,[citation needed] a 1991 book by George Grant, and a 2002 novel by Joy Williams. Robert Heinlein's 2016 short story "The Roads Must Roll" tells that "It was not physically possible to drive safely in those crowded metropolises. Pedestrians were sardonically divided into two classes, the quick, and the dead."[12]

The films include a 1963 war film by Robert Totten,[13][14] a 1978 documentary about the deadly danger of motor racing, where 'quick' is taken in both the modern and the original sense,[15][16] and a 1987 television film by Robert Day based on L'Amour's novel.[citation needed] Sam Raimi's 1995 film The Quick and the Dead tells the story of a female gunfighter who rides into a frontier town and joins a deadly duelling competition to seek revenge for her father's death; here, 'quick' means both "quick on the draw" and "alive".[9][17]

In 2022, under the same title, the British fine-art photographer David Yarrow made a photograph on the theme of the gun-toting visitor to a Wild West town, using a cast of 120 people "near the Crazy Mountain at the old Marlboro Ranch in Montana".[18]

In literary analysis

[edit]

Joan Douglas Peters, analysing the novelist D. H. Lawrence's theory of literary genres, notes that he defines genres as either "quick" or "dead", and that he uses the "quick and the dead" opposition not metaphorically but "as simple, literal description".[19] That is despite his metaphorical definition of "quick" as "the God-flame in everything".[19] In her view, Lawrence finds no contradiction between "the use of metaphor and the expression of literal truth."[19] Peters comments that Lawrence satirizes the religious phrase, but makes use of it all the same, as if to try to prove that "categorical statements should not be taken categorically."[19]

Michelle Toumayants, describing Melvin B. Tolson's use of a mass of proverbs occupying 84 lines of the text of his poetic Libretto, writes that these give the reader insight into the suffering of slaves of African origin: "Griots, the quick owe the quick and the dead. A man owes man to man!" while the character representing Europe denies that Africa has a history: Seule de tous les continents...l'Afrique n'a pas d'histoire.[20] In her view, the "unrelenting, metered, pithy proverbs" are for Tolson "the poetry of the Africans, their art, their music, their culture" as spoken by the "poet-warrior griot".[20]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Between the Quick and the Dead". Punch (magazine). 22 November 1890.
  2. ^ Early English Text Society 1879 pp20-21
  3. ^ "2 Timothy 4". FaithOfGod.net.
  4. ^ a b c "The Book of Common Prayer - 1549: The First Book of Common Prayer". The Book of Common Prayer.
  5. ^ Book of Moroni chapter 10 verse 34
  6. ^ a b "Quick". Dictionary.reference.com. See esp. #14,15.
  7. ^ Quickening in Farlex dictionary, in turn citing The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. copyright 2000
  8. ^ "Idioms: Cut to the quick". thefreedictionary.com.
  9. ^ a b Martin, Gary. "The quick and the dead". Phrases.org.uk. Retrieved 2 December 2024.
  10. ^ "quicksilver (n.)". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 2 December 2024.
  11. ^ 1 Peter 4:3–5
  12. ^ Heinlein, Robert A. (27 February 2016). "Future History Series 03 - The Roads Must Roll". Cento Historias del Mundo. Retrieved 2 December 2024.
  13. ^ The Quick and the Dead. Turner Classic Movies. 1963.
  14. ^ Brode, Douglas (2020). From Hell To Hollywood: An Encyclopedia of World War II Films. Albany, Georgia: BearManor Media. ISBN 978-1629335216.
  15. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 15 February 2008. Retrieved 21 September 2006.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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