Doctor Who | The End of Time - Part I
I had a friend once. She called me Spaceman.
There must be someone left in the universe I haven’t screwed up yet.
DOCTOR WHO | The Empty Child | The Poison Sky | Mummy on the Orient Express
tv meme: [9/70] relationships → The Tenth Doctor & Donna Noble (Doctor Who)
Don’t be so daft. I’m nothing special. Yes you are, you’re brilliant.
the doctor + the human race
The Master + one gifset per episode
The End of Time: Part Two
tv meme: [9/70] relationships → The Tenth Doctor & Donna Noble (Doctor Who)
Don’t be so daft. I’m nothing special. Yes you are, you’re brilliant.
It’s been good though, hasn’t it? All of us. All of it. Everything we did.
You were never alone. All those bright and shining companions… But not anymore? - No.
You can spend the rest of your life with me, but I can’t spend the rest of mine with you. I have to live on. Alone. That’s the curse of the Time Lords.
How did I miss this before?!
I never understood this part, someone explain please?
When Shakespeare is flirting with Martha, the doctor says “We can all have a good flirt later”, and Shakespeare takes this to mean all three of them. He seems pleased at the prospect of flirting with the Doctor, suggesting he’s Bi As Heck™, and the Doctor picks up on this, mentioning the 57 academics thing, which is referring to academics who argue that Shakespeare was bisexual.
It’s a good scene. :D
I mean yes, it’s definitely that, i.e. Shakespeare being bisexual, but it’s ALSO because Martha is black, and each and every time an academic argues that the dark lady was a black woman - most likely Black Luce, an African woman who ran a brothel in London back in the days - half of the ivory tower has a hissy-fit, and the other half, which only barely survived being shown multiple proofs of him having been bisexual, goes into cardiac arrest, because “not our precious Shakespeare”.
I once wrote the following line in an essay during my BA studies in English;
Shakespeare also lets the reader know that his mistress […] presumably is a black woman,
and followed it up with seven footnotes, quoting some of the world’s foremost Shakespeareans, and my marker still had the audacity to write “is this really plausible” next to it, but I digress.
57 academics is also a reference to Sonnet 57, which some debate to have been written for a man.
You need to be careful, because you know the Doctor. He’s wonderful, he’s brilliant, but he’s like fire. Stand too close and people get burned.
You were being kind. Nothing wrong with kind.