Poetic Freedom and Poetic Truth: Chaucer, Shakespeare, Marlowe, Milton |
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Page 46
... insists that Walter was no god at all , that he was not even a good human being : But as for me , I seye that yvele ... insist that the suffering which Walter inflicted upon Griselda over all those years was needless , essentially absurd ...
... insists that Walter was no god at all , that he was not even a good human being : But as for me , I seye that yvele ... insist that the suffering which Walter inflicted upon Griselda over all those years was needless , essentially absurd ...
Page 51
... insists that her suffering was ' needless ' , that it could have been helped . And while Griselda is described as a ' humble creature ' who was disposed to endure the ' adversitee of Fortune ' ( 756 ) , we ourselves know that the slings ...
... insists that her suffering was ' needless ' , that it could have been helped . And while Griselda is described as a ' humble creature ' who was disposed to endure the ' adversitee of Fortune ' ( 756 ) , we ourselves know that the slings ...
Page 68
... insists upon freedom , and grants freedom even to his adversaries . By leaving Adam and Eve free to choose , free to disobey his own orders , he allows them to grow . Indeed , the very curse imposed upon fallen man , his labour , will ...
... insists upon freedom , and grants freedom even to his adversaries . By leaving Adam and Eve free to choose , free to disobey his own orders , he allows them to grow . Indeed , the very curse imposed upon fallen man , his labour , will ...
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Common terms and phrases
actions Adam alike appear argue arguments audience authority beauty become Certainly characters Chaucer choose claim Claudius Cleopatra Clerk's Tale concerned course created critical death desire discussion dream Duchess effect Elizabethan equal evil examples experience fact fall Faustus fear feel finally force freedom give given Griselda Hamlet hand heart historical human husband imagination individual injustice insists instance interpretation John justice kind knowledge less literary literature live London look Lord lose Lost Macbeth matter Milton mind moral murder nature never obvious once ourselves Paradise person play poet poetic poetry present problems prove questions reader reason remains responses says seems Shakespeare side situation sources suffering tells tests thee theory things thou thought tion tragedy true truth turn virtue Walter wanted wife wins