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    Shakespeare and Kingship

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    In writing his history plays‚ Shakespeare was actually commenting on what he thought about the notion of kingship. Through his plays‚ he questions the divine right of kings‚ which the kings and the aristocracy used heavily in their favour to win the people’s love. In Macbeth‚ King Richard II and King Henry IV part 1‚ Shakespeare shows us his opinion of kingship in general. Although the plays are written about individual kings‚ I think that Shakespeare used the plays as an opportunity to voice his

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    The Moon in Shakespeare

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    The moon in Shakespeare’s play symbolizes Diana‚ the Roman personification of the moon‚ and the Wheel of Fortune. What does the Wheel of Fortune have to do with Diana? Shakespeare considered both of them to be much the same. Both have a cyclical nature: the moon waxes and wanes just like Fortune waxes and wanes. The motif of both figures in Shakespeare’s plays reveals his belief that the moon is a symbol of the fickleness and changeability of fortune and luck‚ at once an omen and a blessing‚ and

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    Compare and Contrast of Sonnet 116 and Othello What is love? Mr. Shakespeare tries his best to tackle this topic in Sonnet 116. Stating that true love is not merely a physical attractiveness‚ because how one looks is something that goes away in time. Love is everlasting‚ that it “bears it out even to the edge of doom.” (Sonnet 116 Lit Book) One can see that Shakespeare has sturdy roots in what he defines as “love”‚ but do his confident beliefs in what love is correspond to the love shown in his

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    time played a crucial role in all of his plays‚ sonnets‚ and writings in general. Even though during his time‚ the views on gender roles were much different than today‚ Shakespeare still found a way to make his views of the various roles of men and women very clear. Through the art of language and poetry‚ Shakespeare’s views of men and women in society were well known and portrayed to his audiences‚ whether it was in 1597 or 2016. When Shakespeare began writing‚ he was writing during the Elizabethan

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    Through juxtaposition and symbolism‚ and the diction that Shakespeare uses to establish them‚ he argues that love transcends superficial conventional notions of desirable women. At the surface‚ Shakespeare uses juxtaposition to compare two contrasting images of women. He uses juxtaposition in either every couplet or individual line. Shakespeare contrasts the qualities of the ideal woman and the qualities of the woman whom he fancies. He starts

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    Literature Final Paper Sonnet Evolution When readers hear the word sonnet‚ they usually think of Shakespeare; however‚ he is not the first sonneteer‚ nor the last‚ of course. The sonnet got its beginnings centuries ago and has endured. One might ask why it has endured over such a lengthy period of time‚ and the answer is a simple one: EVOLUTION. Just as humans have had to evolve over time‚ the sonnet has had to do so as well. The two main forms of the sonnet are the Italian sonnet (also referred to

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    Many books present facts‚ reasonable suppositions‚ traditions‚ and speculations concerning the life and career of William Shakespeare. Taken as a whole‚ these materials give a comprehensive picture of England’s foremost dramatic poet. Tradition and sober supposition are not necessarily false because they lack proof of their existence. However‚ readers interested in Shakespeare should distinguish between facts and unfounded beliefs about his life. From one point of view‚ modern scholars are fortunate

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    Text Focus

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    Text focus Questions – Unit 1 His 101 1. Describe Ziggurats (Ch. 1) 2. Identify the “black lands” of Egypt (Ch. 1) 3. How is the modern era different from other previous eras according to the author (Are We Human) 4. Identify the new human species highlighted in this article and how it became extinct? (Are We Human) 5. Why does Babylonian society limit the freedom of women in the Code of Hammurabi (Ch.2) 6. Describe and define the Axial Age. (Ch. 2) 7. How does the author challenge current theory

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    Critical analysis of Shakespeare’s Sonnet 130 Shakespeare’s Sonnet 130 compares the speaker’s lover to a number of other beauties—and never in the lover’s favor. Her eyes are “nothing like the sun‚” her lips are less red than coral; compared to white snow‚ her breasts are dun-colored‚ and her hairs are like black wires on her head. In the second quatrain‚ the speaker says he has seen roses separated by color (“damasked”) into red and white‚ but he sees no such roses in his mistress’s cheeks; and

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    mistress’ Eyes are Nothing like the Sun” are beautiful Petrarchan sonnets with a common theme which is love. Both poets talk about his/her love for another person. Though they are Petrarchan sonnets‚ they both have their differences and similarities in their form‚ figures of speech and subject matter. ‘How do I love Thee?’ is a poem written by Elizabeth Browning in 1850 in which she explains her intense love for a man. This is a Petrarchan sonnet; made up of fourteen lines‚ contains an octave‚ sestet‚ and

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