WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE: A Midsummer Night's Dream
Read the extract below and answer the question that follows:
He hath rid his prologue like a rough colt: he knows not the stop.
A good moral, my lord: it is not enough to speak, but to speak true.
The speaker is
During the play-within-a-play in Act 5, Quince (as Prologue) delivers his lines with terrible punctuation and pacing. Hippolyta makes this witty observation, comparing his delivery to an untrained horse ("rough colt") that doesn't know when to stop.
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