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Shakespeare's knock knock joke.

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graemer | 07:04 Sun 05th Jun 2005 | Arts & Literature
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I recently read that either Macbeth or Othello (can't remember which) features the first recorded knock knock joke. Does anyone know what it is?
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Its Macbeth, here

of course, knock knock jokes were only at the beta testing stage then, so it's not as funny as his 'how many playwrights does it take to change a lightbulb' jokes.
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Thanks woof. You're right jno I was hoping for something like Knock Knock who's there? Duncan. Duncan who? etc
Duncan Donuts...

No its more interesting than that !

I assume that the link is to the porter's speech in erm....Act1 Scene 2 or thereabouts - early.

The speech is in prose and not blank verse - this indicates apparently that the Porter can ad lib - in one London production  - he would drag in references Tommy Steele - who would obviously not be known to Elizabthan audiences.

The other thing is - the reference to equivocation, Macbeth was written for the accession of james VI and I and there was a roman catholic witch-hunt on for Jesuits. An early interrogation tecnic was to apply an oath to the papist suspect traitor and then say is there a jesuit lving with you? Under oath he would have to tell the truth or burn in Hell (honestly I am not joking)

So the Js said it was moral and therefore lawful for you to say - No there is no jesuit in my house with the intention of saying yes there is a jesuit   (!!) No I am not joking - and da daaaaah here is a contemporary reference to it which aids also in dating it.

So there is more to this sixteenth century knock knock joke huh?

Question Author
Thank you Peter, most scholarly and informative.
It's lucky for Will that he didn't do stand up comedy

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