A Plague On Both Your Houses. “A Plague on both your houses” is an idiom meaning “I’m not going to take sides you’re both at fault and I will have nothing to do with it” It comes from Romeo and Juliet and is the last words – a curse – of a character who is dying as a result of the feud between the two families.
A Plague on Both Your Houses introduces physician Matthew Bartholomew whose unorthodox but effective treatment of his patients frequently draws accusations of heresy from his more traditional colleagues Besides his practice Bartholomew teaches medicine at Michaelhouse part of the fledgling University of Cambridge 41/5 (441)Publish Year 1998Author Susanna GregoryCited by.
A plague on both your houses Shakespeare Quotes eNotes.com
Mercutio chagrined and disgusted cries “a plague a' both your houses”—the feuding houses of Capulet and Montague—and complains that Tybalt has escaped unscathed Shortly after Mercutio has.
The Saying A Plague On Both Your Houses Meaning And Origin
'A Plague On Both Your Houses: Meaning & Context Of Phrase
A Plague on Both Your Houses (Matthew Bartholomew Chronicles
Free Dictionary Idioms by The Plague on both your houses
A PLAGUE ON BOTH YOUR HOUSES (Amateur SleuthEngland1300s) – G Gregory Susanna – 1st in series Time Warner Paperback 1996 Paperback Matthew Bartholomew is a physician and teacher at the University of Cambridge which is suddenly having an epidemic of unexplained deaths that he is told relate to a power struggle with College of Oxford But when the plague comes to Cambridge Matthew is both trying to save lives and uncover the truth 38/5 (275)Format Paperback.