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| when the poet/singer is orally preforms the story. It changes how people relate to it because each story teller would bring in their on aspect. |
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| Give a literary example of scop. |
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| an unwritten code, part of the culture of the time period, that includes the proper way of courtly love, how to treat a lords, and gods justice. |
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| Give a literary example chivalric code |
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| Sir Gowin and the green night |
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| An idea that there is an order or structure to a society. For example you can classify people into working class, fighting class and religious class. |
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| Give a literary example of estate satire |
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| short metrical tail, meant for humor |
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| give a literary example of fabliaux |
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| repetition of the same sound or the same kind of sound. |
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| four ways of interpreting a story. 1)literal 2)allegorical 3) moral 4) analogical. |
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| god's justice. deals with evil. |
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| Godly power, kingly power. It goes from the cosmo's to the people. |
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| "the art of government" not just governing the state but the court and relations |
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| Original Italian sonnet form in which the sonnet's rhyme scheme divides the poem's 14 lines into two parts, an octet (first eight lines) and a sestet (last six lines). The rhyme scheme for the octet is typically abbaabba. There are a few possibilities for the sestet, including cdecde, cdcdcd, and cdcdee. |
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| Shakespearean English sonnet |
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| consists of three quatrains and a couplet--that is, it rhymes abab cdcd efef gg |
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| the turn in the sonnet. usually the 8th or 9th line. |
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| the run over of one line onto the next line. |
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| 10 syllables in each line. five pares of alternating stressed and unstressed sylables. |
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| Limiting government- the glorious revolution of 1688-89 and the accession of William III brought him back to England and made possible the publication of the essay on which he had been working for many years. |
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| rejects religion and concentrates on human values |
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| induction vs. deduction Baccon |
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| Baccon thought religion and science should be kept separate, but are equally important. |
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| all knowledge is derived from experience through the scenes. |
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