President Buhari while trying to debunk opinions in some quarters that he would be vindictive in power said in his inaugural speech that "the past is prologue".
One have been at lost at what the president meant by that quote, within the context of the message he was trying to pass across.
The president surely, could not have meant that he would preface (start) this present with the past, which is what his quote potrayed in my opinion.
What about "the past is epilogue"?
CAO.
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President Buhari gave an excellent speech. However, "prologue" is the wrong word in the context it is used: "A few people have privately voiced fears that on coming back to office I shall go after them. These fears are groundless. There will
be no paying off old scores. The past is prologue." We can parse the word which way we want, it does not make it correct.
Written by my good friend and constitutional scholar, Scott N. Bradley.
At the beginning of the American Revolution, the great patriot Patrick Henry stated, “I have but one lamp by which my feet are guided; and that is the lamp of experience. I know of no way of judging the future but by the past.”
In The Tempest, William Shakespeare (act 1, scene 1) observed “What’s past is prologue,” meaning, the experience of the past is but an introduction to that which is to come.
In many ways, history repeats itself. If we are willing to learn the lessons of history, perhaps the nation may avoid the mistakes of the past.
-- kenneth w. harrow faculty excellence advocate professor of english michigan state university department of english 619 red cedar road room C-614 wells hall east lansing, mi 48824 ph. 517 803 8839 har...@msu.edu
Professor Lady Nnaemeka:
Some of you -- including VC Aluko and Sir Toyin himself -- make the Dialogue series a joy to read and archive! Thank you very much! Also, I totally agree that President Buhari gave a great speech with a lot of historicity, and laced with Lincolnian analogies. In fact, his use of the Prologue word, just like saying that the past being the past, did remind me of what a former Ghanaian leader said about those, who often dwelt on the past and its scores, as the Ghanaian leader bemoaned in his own appeal to forget about past scores: "He who dwells on the past does not only lose the past but the present also."
Some of us, as Nigerians at heart, are celebrating with our Nigerian cousins over the anthills in order to have a dance in the forest, in Achebean-cum-Soyinkan analogy, laced with Zikism and Awoism!
A.B. Assensoh.
Antomo:
. . . Who's the next heir of Naples?
Sebastian:
Claribel.
Antonio:
She that is Queen of Tunis; she that dwells
Ten leagues beyond man's life; she that from Naples
Can have no note, unless the sun were post—
The Man i' th' Moon's too slow—till new-born chins
Be rough and razorable; she that from whom
We all were sea-swallow'd, though some cast again
(And by that destiny) to perform an act
Whereof what's past is prologue; what to come,
In yours and my discharge.
Context matters. The context in which it is used in Shakespeare is different from its inscription in President Buhari's speech. Quoting Shakespeare out of context is not a good idea.
-- kenneth w. harrow faculty excellence advocate professor of english michigan state university department of english 619 red cedar road room C-614 wells hall east lansing, mi 48824 ph. 517 803 8839 har...@msu.edu
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