D
D. Spencer Hines
"For 'tis the sport to have the engineer
Hoist with his own petar."
William Shakespeare -- Hamlet -- Act III, scene iv, line 206
Not "PETARD" and not "HOISTED" -- in this famous quotation.
Prosecutio stultitiae est gravis vexatio, executio stultitiae coronat opus.
This faux engineer, Gordon, chooses to hide behind just a first name.
'Nuff Said.
D. Spencer Hines
Lux et Veritas et Libertas
Vires et Honor
Veni, Vidi, Calcitravi Asinum
Hoist with his own petar."
William Shakespeare -- Hamlet -- Act III, scene iv, line 206
Not "PETARD" and not "HOISTED" -- in this famous quotation.
Prosecutio stultitiae est gravis vexatio, executio stultitiae coronat opus.
This faux engineer, Gordon, chooses to hide behind just a first name.
'Nuff Said.
D. Spencer Hines
Lux et Veritas et Libertas
Vires et Honor
Veni, Vidi, Calcitravi Asinum
Gordon wrote:Unfortunately Shakespeare was not a Royal Engineer. A Petard, with a "D"You need to take a close look at William Shakespeare's _Hamlet_.
When you have done that come back for further basic instruction.
is an explosive charge that is fixed halfway up the gate of a fortified
enclosure in order to blow a hole in it.
People who got hung up with it were killed. Hence the phrase "hoisted
with his own petard". [sic]