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Final
ahh
79
Literature
Not Applicable
12/09/2007

Additional Literature Flashcards

 


 

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Term

April

 

 Chaucer deliberately identifies the month because, he says, that in the Spring, people want to travel.  During the late 14th century, the urge led people to go on pilgrimages.  In our world, we have spring break.

Definition
During what month, according to the opening lines, do the events of the General Prologue take place?
Term

An inn.

 

Note that the name of the inn is specified by Chaucer as the Tabard, and that Chaucer states that the inn in is a part of London called then (as it still is) "Southwark" (works--or buildings--on the south side of the River Thames, across from the "City," the oldest, original part of London).

Definition
Chaucer also makes it clear in the early part of the poem that the events of the General Prologue take place in what sort of establishment?
Term

Chaucer himself.

 

Chaucer's own droll personality and sense of irony are a significant part of the General Prologue (and the material "between" the stories).  Chaucer is the one who describes all the pilgrims, and his apparent attitude toward the other pilgrims is significant.  He tells us a good deal of information about almost all of them.  (In fact, he seems to know a great deal of information that he really would not have if he were meeting these people for the first time.)  Many of the pilgrims are not exactly honorable, but Chaucer never openly condemns them.  In fact, we become aware of much of the "negative" information only by "reading between the lines." 


   
Definition
Whose is the "voice" who is "speaking" the General Prologue?  In other words, who is "saying" the words you read?
   

 


   
Term

They are all going on a religious pilgrimage to visit the shrine of St. Thomas Becket.

 

Many of the pilgrims would not be considered at all "religious" by modern American Christians, but the fact that they are going on a religious pilgrimage  is evidence of the pervasiveness of Christianity during the late Middle Ages.

Definition
  The speaker of the General Prologue makes it clear that all of the persons he describes are planning to go to Canterbury, and just happen to have gathered at this one place before departing for there.  What is the purpose of their trip?
[image]
Term

The Knight

 

The fact that the speaker begins with this person reflects the degree to which people in the Middle Ages thought in hierarchical patterns.  The knight is not considered of the "Nobility," but is higher up on the Great Chain of Being than anyone else among the people in the General Prologue.  The Great Chain of Being will be discussed during class.

Definition
When the speaker begins to identify the persons who are on the journey (and to describe most of them), he begins with the person who is thought to be the highest ranking in the society.  Who is that person?
Term

The Host (that is, the proprietor of the establishment where the General Prologue is set)

Feedback:

Note that the Host's plan is actually a business scheme for him:  His plan increases the chances that all of the company will be back in his inn after the trip.

Definition
Who proposes the "story-telling" contest plan?
Term
Four
Feedback: Each person, according to the plan, will tell two stories on the way to Canterbury and two stories on the way back.  During class discussion, attention will focus on how many stories that would produce, and that issue is related to the issue of how many travelers there are.  After you complete this quiz, go back to the General Prologue and count the travelers.  Remember that the narrator is one of them.
Definition
According to the plan for the story-telling contest, how many stories all together will each person tell during the journey?
Term
The Reeve
Feedback:

A Reeve is a person who is the overseer of work on an estate. (The term is still present in modern English in the word "sheriff," the title given to the "overseer" of a "shire" or "county.)

The Reeve, you will recall from the General Prologue, is a traveling companion of the Miller's.  A reader might wonder why the Reeve has such strong objections to the Miller's proposal to tell a tale about a carpenter.  It is discovered later in the poem (in a portion of the Canterbury Tales not included in the Norton Anthology) that this Reeve, before being elevated to overseer, had been a carpenter by trade.  Naturally, he would take offense at a story which (he rightly expects) will hold a member of his craft up for ridicule.  Later, when the Reeve tells his own tale, he tells a fabliau (an important term which will be discussed during class) about a miller who is the one who is cuckolded (another important term that will be discussed in class) and thus held up for ridicule.  While the Reeve's Tale is not included in the selections from Canterbury Tales contained in our anthology, the same story is told by one of the young nobles in Boccacio's Decameron, and that story is included in the Norton Anthology, beginning on page 1631. 

Definition
Who (that is, which other pilgrim) objects to the Miller's proposal to "tell a golden legend and a life / Both of a carpenter and of his wife"?
Term
Student
Feedback: During class discussion of this Tale, it will be pointed out that stories such as this one (known as fabliaux) almost always include students, clergy, "commoners" such as a carpenter or miller, or some combination of those.  Thus, it is widely believed that students were the source of such tales. 
Definition
What is the occupation of Nicholas, who is the boarder of John and Alison in the Miller's Tale?
Term
Carpenter
Feedback: See Feedback to the first question.  Note also that his "trade" plays a role in the tale.
Definition
What is the occupation of John, the husband of Alison?
Term
Clerk
Feedback: A "clerk" (pronounced to rhyme with "dark" then as well as now in England) was a person who was at least on the priphery of Holy Orders, so his desire for Alison is inappropriate.  Note also that this is the "clergy" element in this fabliau.
Definition
What is the occupation of Absolom, who, after the events recounted in the Miller's Tale, was forever hesitant to kiss anyone in the dark?
Term
Flood
Feedback: Note that he specifically predicts a flood that will be greater than "Noah's flood," and that the Carpenter should have known that such a flood, according to the Scriptures, God promised that no such large flood would occur again. Thus, the carpenter shows himself to be guilty of the sin of sloth (failure to do his duty in knowing the promises of God).  Class discussion will explore the significance of this and another sin he may have committed.  Of what sin are Alison, Nicholas, and Absolom  guilty?  Where does that sin rank in the list of Seven Deadly Sins, as they were ordered during earlier class discussion?  Is there a relationship between the level of sin and the punishment each person endures?
Definition
What natural disaster does Nicholas claim to have foreknowledge of as part of his scheme to get time alone with Alison?
Term
   The church
Feedback: Approximately thirty percent of the persons described in the General Prologue are associated in some way with the Church.  During class discussion, it will be pointed out that this figure is representative of the percentage of persons within the entire population that is associated with the Church as a primary occupation.  Today, that percentage represents the portion of persons employed by some level of government.
Definition
At least seven of the persons described in the General Prologue are associated with the same medieval institution.  What is that institution?
Term
  [image]  

Five

Feedback:

Note that Chaucer had said, in the General Prologue, that she'd been "taken to wife" by five men.  The original Middle English version says

Housbondes at chirche dore she hadde five,

Withouten other compaignye in youthe

(Translation:  "She'd had five husbands [whom she married] at the door of the church, without other company in youth," or as the Norton Anthology of Western Literature translates it, "Omitting other youthful company." )  The phrase that follows the equivalent passage in the Modern English translation of the Norton is "But let that pass for now!"  This is one of those ambiguous passage that are scattered throughout the Canterbury Tales

The fact that she'd married each of the five husbands "at the door of the church" indicates that all the marriages were approved by the church since she was a widow each time.  (Only the very wealthy and powerful would be married inside the church; the more common folks were married at the door of the church.)  But the line "But let that pass for now!" makes us wonder what's meant by "Omitting other youthful company":  Is Chaucer suggesting that she had had no lovers outside of marriage?  Or is he suggesting that she had had five sexual partners in her husbands, plus other lovers outside of marriage?  The fact that she is described as having a healthy sexual appetite certainly gives credence to the latter interpretation.

   

Definition
How many times, according to the Wife of Bath herself in the Prologue to her Tale,  has Alison (the Wife of Bath) been married?  Chaucer, in the General Prologue, provides the same information. [image]
Term
Wicked Wives
Feedback: "Wives" here means (as in the phrase "Wife of Bath") not necessarily "female spouse," but instead "women" of any sort.  Publications like the one Jankyn is perusing were not uncommon during the Middle Ages, when it was still widely believed that women (because of the actions of Eve) were the source of all the evil in the world. Note that Dante, when he encountered Helen in Inferno, referred to her as the cause of all the loss of life in the Trojan War.  
Definition
In her Prologue, the Wife of Bath tells about her husband Jenkin.  While the book Jenkin is fond of reading contains material from numerous sources, the Wife of Bath says in her Prologue that "He dredged this book for tales of ____________    ___________."  What two-word, alliterative phrase correctly fills the blank? 
Term
   Rape of a peasant girl
Feedback:

Two issues are implicit in this event: 

First, while it establishes the power of the knight (here representing Nobility) over the lower class, it also sets up a way of thinking about women that is fairly new for the times (the Wife of Bath's time, not King Arthur's), because in the Wife of Bath's story, power is given to the women of King Arthur's court to decide this matter. 

Second, note the comments the Wife of Bath had made about this story being set "In the old days when King Arthur ruled the nation."  This line does two things:  it makes it clear that this story (like Sir Gawain and the Green Knight) is part of "Arthurian legend," and it sets up the information she gives in the two lines later stating that at that time "This realm we live in was a fairy land," meaning that legendary creatures like fairies and elves were still around.  Establishing this idea does two things: 

One, it gives her an opportunity in the lines that follow to get in a dig at "these holy friars" (note that a friar is one of her fellow pilgrims) whose arrival has driven the fairies away by the friars' acts of blessing "our chambers, kitchens, halls, and bowers, / Our citites, towns, and castles, our high towers, / Our villages, our stables, barns, and dairies."  Implicit in her comment (though not stated) is a condemnation of the friars:  they expect an offering in exchange for all this blessing.

Two, it foreshadows the magical powers of the old crone who helps the knight with the answer to his question.

Definition
What crime is committed by the unnamed young knight in the tale told by the Wife of Bath?
Term
What is it that women most desire?
Feedback: Note how appropriate this question is for a story told by the Wife of Bath, whose lengthy prologue had dealt with this very issue. 
Definition
For punishment, the knight is sent on a quest to discover the answer to a vexing question.  What is that question?
Term
An old, lothesome woman of low birth.
Feedback: Answer 3 ("A beautiful wood nymph, one of the fairies the knight found dancing in a circle") is tempting, but recall that all the fairies had scattered when he reached the place where they had been dancing, and that only the old woman was there.  The knight did not realize the old woman has magical powers until near the end of the story.
Definition
Who helps the knight by giving him the answer?
Term

Sovereignty over their husbands

Feedback:

This answer is another of those ambiguous passages, since any of the incorrect answers to this question may be what is really meant by the answer.  The term "sovereignty" is the issue, and the possibilities of its meaning will be discussed during class. 

Definition
What is the answer to the question which the knight tells the assembled court?
Term
That the knight marry her.
Feedback:

Since she is poor, ugly, and of "low birth," the knight is sick at heart for having to marry her and hesitatant to consummate the marriage.  When the crone (the term for such a person as the old woman) realizes his misgivings, she presents an argument as to why he should not hold her low estate, poverty, and ugliness against her.  Her reasoning is in the form of a disputacion, a medieval French term for an argument based upon biblical and classical precedent and citing each liberally.  In preparation for discussion of the Wife of Bath's Tale, review the sorts of arguments the crone offers.  In addition, review the way the Wife of Bath herself, in her Prologue, uses similar methods of argument for her claims about women in marriage.

Definition
What "payment" is requested by the person who helped the knight by giving him the answer?
Term
Avarice
Feedback:

Radix Malorum Est Cupiditas means literally (and word for word) the following:

Radix = "root"

Malorum = "of evil"

Est = "is"

Cupiditas = "Avarice"

Avarice is also known as "greed" and "cupidity," and is the fifth of the Seven Deadly Sins. The passage is directly from the Scriptures.

Definition
In his Prologue, the Pardoner says these lines to the other pilgrims, "My text is ever the same, and ever was:  Radix malorum est cupiditas"  before he preaches his standard sermon to them.  (The sermon makes up the Pardoner's Tale.)   What is the theme the Pardoner always preaches on?
Term

A woman who has cuckolded her husband

Feedback: Note the trick (what the Pardonerer calls "hornswoggling"):  Even if a woman saw through the Pardoner and realized that he was a charlatan, she would still feel compelled to give him money.  If she didn't, her husband might think it was because she had cuckolded him. 
Definition
During his Prologue, the Pardoner says that in his sermons, he identifies a group that "may not make an offering" because the offerings of people who fit the description he gives "have no power nor grace."  Who (i.e., what sort of person) does he identify as being a member of that group?
Term
Death
Feedback: "Death," of course, is not a thing that can be found.  The foolishness of the three is illustrated by their desire to "kill death." 
Definition
In the Pardoner's Tale, what do the three men from the tavern go in search of?
Term

An "old man" who leads them to a pot of gold

Feedback: That old man, we might suppose, is "the Grim Reaper," the personification of Death.  He is the one who sends them to the "pot of gold."  Schemes to get a larger share of that pot of gold for themselves leads to each person's death.
Definition
While searching for that being or item mentioned in the previous question,  what do the three find?
Term
He tries to get them to make offerings and buy his "holy relics."
Feedback: The irony of this act is, of course, that he has already told them (in his Prologue) that the relics are fake and that he is a shyster.  We can't help but wonder why he goes ahead and tries to get the pilgrims to make offerings.  Note also the reply the Host gives the Pardoner.  Could this be related to the reason that Chaucer says in the General Prologue that the Pardoner "was beardless and would never have a beard" and that "His cheek was always smooth as if just sheared"?
Definition

At the end of his tale, what does the Pardoner do to the pilgrims?

Term
By seeing the greater misfortune of his brother.
Feedback: Note that religion has little place (although there is some) in these stories.  Similarly, drinking of alcohol is nowhere mentioned.  The "trading trip" is part of one of the stories told later.  While he does kill his wife and her lover, he remains despondent until he sees the wife of his brother engaged in an adulterous mating that has overtones of an orgy.
Definition
In the Prologue, how is Shahzaman (the brother who "found his wife lying in the arms of one of the kitchen boys") "cured" of his depression over that situation?
Term
Wandering until they find someone whose misfortune is greater than their own
Feedback: Note that this quest had begun after both brothers had been cuckolded.  These events had led them to conclude, along with Agamemnon and the Miller, that "Women are not to be trusted." 
Definition
What "mission" are the two brothers on when they encounter the "black pillar" which turns out to be a "black demon" with a "full-grown woman" kept captive in a glass chest?
Term

Their rings

Feedback: Note that the story implies that the brothers cannot keep from granting her the rings--which she adds to her "collection" from previous encounters to make an even 100 rings--just as the demon cannot keep her from cuckolding him with the 100 men.  The woman states that "nothing can prevent or alter what is predestined and that when a woman desires something no one can stop her."  The brothers agree, stating, "Great is women's cunning."  Inevitably, we will want to compare the ideas the class became aware of during the discussion of Sir Gawain's encounter with the woman of the castle and the views of women expressed by the Miller and the Wife of Bath.
Definition
After the woman from the box forces the two brothers to have sex with her, even though they "feel nothing but dismay and fear of this demon," what does she demand of them (and receive from them)?
Term
  He will "marry for one night only and kill the woman the next morning, in order to save himself from the wickness and cunning of women."
Feedback: No feedback available.
Definition
In the portions of The Thousand and One Nights in the Norton Anthology, the Vizier tells a series of stories intended to keep his daughter Shahrazad from carrying out her scheme to try to subvert the King's plan.  What is the plan of the king (Shahrayar)?
Term
A man can understand the language of animals but cannot tell others what the animals have said.
Feedback: No feedback available
Definition
The tales told by the Vizier all include variations on which idea?
Term
All of the above
Feedback:

Note that these accounts are told as "stories within stories within stories"--Shahrazad has told the story of the merchant facing death for the accidental killing of the Demon's son, and each of these tells his own story.

Definition

The story Shahrazad tells involves a merchant who has an encounter with a demon.  The demon determines that he must kill the Merchant in retaliation for the Merchant's having killed the son of the Demon with a discarded date pit.  When the merchant returns to the site a year later to receive death from the Demon, he is rescured by the actions of  which of the following?

Term
   not care about
Feedback: Note that Machiavelli seems to presume that most people (not just "princes") would want to be thought to be "generous."  If you did not notice it before, go back and re-read the passage where he explains why it is better to be thought to be stingy.
Definition
The prince "will, if he is prudent, ________ being called stingy."
Term

cruelty

Feedback: Again, Machiavelli seems to go against what most people would think, since no one wants to have the reputation of being a cruel person.  And again (if you didn't catch it as you read before), go back and re-read the rationale he offers for why it is preferable for a prince to be thought to be cruel rather than compassionate.
Definition
"By giving a very few examples of ________, [the prince] can be more truly compassionate than those who through too much compassion allow disturbances to continue, from which arise murders or acts of plunder."
Term
religion
Feedback: Note that the emphasis is on making "a show of possessing."  In fact, Machiavelli even argues that it is not necessary to actually HAVE religion as long as one is perceived by others as being religious.
Definition

"There is nothing more necessary to make a show of possessing than __________."

Term
half
Feedback:

This passage represents a major "Turning Point" in the course. The notion of Fate (what our translator of Machiavelli's The Prince calls "fortune") has been one of the Great Themes all semester, with character after character affirming the belief that one's fate is determined outside one's self. (Remember the speeches by Telemachus, by Hector, by Aeneas, and others on the subject.) Now, in the Renaissance (the "beginnings of the modern world"), a new idea about this matter has come to the fore. It is the concept of "free will." If one accepts what Machiavelli says--that Fate is arbiter of half of our lives--then the problem that arises is this: which half does fate control? If you did not catch Machiavelli's solution to that problem, re-read this section on how to deal with "fortune" and free will. It is a very significant "moment" in our understanding of the shifting paradigm represented by the Renaissance.

Definition
"Fortune is the arbiter of ________ of our actions."
Term
A guard post outside the castle
Feedback: Note that it is Bernardo, who is NOT on duty, who issues the challenge "Who's there?" a challenge which should be issued by Fancisco, who says, "Nay, answer me.  Stand and Unfold yourself," which are the words that the guard is supposed to utter.  Critics have suggested that the theme of things "being out of joint" in the play begins here and continues throughout until they are resolved at the end.
Definition
What is the apparent setting (as determined by the dialogue) of the opening scene of the play?
Term

No one

Feedback: Is it possible that the ghost is waiting for Hamlet and appears here only so that Horatio will tell Hamlet about the ghost (as he does) and get Hamlet to come to a place where the ghost can communicate with him?  Bernardo suggests, after the ghost's second appearance, that its departure had to do with the cock crowing.  Note also that during this second appearance, the "scholar" Horatio offers three reasons for which ghosts appear (Act I, Scene I, Lines 128 - 138).  Audiences at the time, who were especially steeped in "ghost lore," would have known that there was a fourth reason--to call for revenge for the wrongful death they had suffered--but that Horatio doesn't get to it in his address to the ghost (because the cock crows).  The idea of a ghost calling for revenge is, nonetheless, planted in the minds of the audience.  
Definition
To whom does the ghost speak in its first two appearances?
Term
A potential invasion by the armies of Norway
Feedback: This is the "Fortinbras" plot, and while it is never at the "center" of the play's plot, it is always an issue. In fact, Fortinbras himself enters in the last scene.  Some productions of the play leave this element out entirely.  Class discussion will stress the importance of this "external threat" to the theme of the play.
Definition
During the first scene, Horatio explains a situation that is the cause of the heightened concerns of the kingdom.  What is that situation?
Term
   The throne room
Feedback: It is interesting to note the "movement" of the issues the king (Claudius) raises in this scene, which is often referred to as "the court scene":  first he discusses the death of the former king ("Old Hamlet," brother of Claudius, who is now the king). Then he moves to the marriage of himself and his later brother's wife (an act which some cultures consider incestuous).  Then, after he addresses the issue of the external threat represented by Fortinbras, he shifts his attention to Laertes, asking "what would thou have, Laertes?"  Laertes wants only permission "to return to France," a request that is a mere formality not really on a level with matters of state that had been the subjects earlier.  Could Claudius be using this address to Laertes as an entry to what he really wants:  to find out why Hamlet is so sad and depressed?
Definition

The mood of the second scene is strikingly different from the mood of the first scene.  What is, apparently, the setting of the second scene?

[image]
Term

His mother's marriage coming so soon after his father's death

Feedback:

It is notable that Hamlet does not mention here (although he does mention it later in an almost off-handed way) that his uncle and not he had been elevated to the kingship upon the death of Hamlet's father.  He is also more distressed by his mother's quick marriage following his father's death than his own ambition or even the fact that she had married her late husband's brother.

   
Definition
Upon being questioned by the king and queen, Hamlet reveals that he has been upset about what?
Term
Avoiding romantic entanglement with Hamlet
Feedback: Her reply to his advice is worth re-examining.  Note also that Polonius comes and gives a lot of advice about character and honesty.  This is especially interesting in light of the sneakiness and duplicity he displays by sending agents to spy on Laertes in Paris and later, with regard to Hamlet.
Definition
About what does Laertes warn his sister, Ophelia, just before he departs for Paris?
Term
Hamlet only
Feedback:

The ghost claims to be the ghost of Hamlet's dead father, but people of the time (who were even more fascinated by the supernatural than people of the present age) believed that Satan would sometimes take the form of a ghost in order to entice people to sin. Consequently, your professor (and many other scholars), believing that Shakespeare intended the ghost's identity to be ambiguous, will not refer to the Ghost as "the ghost of Hamlet's father," but merely as "the Ghost."  Note, in fact, that the only source for "proof" that the ghost is indeed the ghost of Old King Hamlet is the word of the ghost itself.  Everyone else says it "looks like" the old king.

Definition
To whom does the ghost speak in its third appearance?
Term
Spy on Laertes
Feedback: After all the platitudes about character that Polonius had given Laertes before the latter's departure, it is a bit strange that he should send someone to spy on his own son.  Could this behavior reflect on Polonius's character?  Note his actions related to his daughter later in the play.
Definition
What is the task for which Polonius sends Reynaldo to Paris?
Term
That Hamlet has sent Ophelia love letters and gifts
Feedback: The relationship between Ophelia and Hamlet is an odd one.  Not only are we readers/viewers not sure if they are indeed "lovers" (either in the physical sense or in the romantic sense), but we are also aware that there is a social barrier that would hinder their involvement together, since Ophelia is not of "royal blood."
Definition
What does Polonius report to the Queen regarding Ophelia?
Term
A group of "players" or actors
Feedback:

The play (as altered by Hamlet) will be performed later by the players.  Note that the king does react to what the play depicts. 

Definition

The appearance at Elsinore of what group gives Hamlet a plan for catching "the conscience of the king"?

Term
Ophelia comes to the conclusion that Hamlet has lost his mental health.
Feedback:

This scene begins with Ophelia's expression of a desire to return "remembrances" to Hamlet.  During the scene, Hamlet tells her repeatedly to "get thee to a nunnery." Much of his comments have to do with beauty, deception, sexuality, and reproduction.  The term "nunnery" might mean what it sounds like--a place where nuns live in chastity--but a "nunnery" could also refer to a brothel.  No wonder Ophelia comments, "O what a noble mind is here o'erthrown!"  It is interesting also to recall that Hamlet, after his conversation with the Ghost who claims to be the ghost of his father, tells his friends that part of his strategy will be to "put on an antic disposition," that is, to pretend to be mad ("crazy").  Is Hamlet's behavior with Ophelia part of that plot?  It is also interesting to note that Ophelia herself goes mad later in the play. 

Definition

Following Hamlet's "To be, or not to be" soliloquy in Act III, scene i, and before the Players enter to present their play, Hamlet and Ophelia have a conversation.  What is the outcome of that conversation?

Term
He rises and leaves the room.
Feedback: Notice that his actions are not conclusive of anything, much less his guilt of the murder of Old Hamlet.  Readers (and viewers) of Hamlet often try to use these actions as "proof" that Claudius killed Old Hamlet.  Some performances have the actor playing Claudius play it that way, but in point of fact, we do not "know" of his guilt until later.  (See a question related to that fact below.)
Definition
During the Players' presentation of The Mousetrap, the play that Hamlet requests so that he can "catch the conscience of the King," the Players mime the murder of a king in the manner the Ghost had claqimed "he"--i.e., Hamlet's father--had been murdered.  How does the King respond to that event in the play?
Term
He still is in possession of those things he gained through his sin.
Feedback: He states, "O, what form of prayer / Can serve my turn? 'Forgive me my foul murder'? / That cannot be, since I am still possessed / Of those effects for which I did the murder-- / My crown, mine own ambition, and my queen."  Only here do we (the audience or reader) realize that what the Ghost had claimed was true:  Claudius had killed his brother, King Hamlet, in order to claim the crown and the queen.  There is irony in this situation, however, as the next question indicates.
Definition
Following the play, the King, in a soliloquy, states that he would pray, but "pray can I not."  Why, according to his soliloquy, does he believe his prayers are ineffectual?
Term
Because Hamlet believes that Claudius, since he is apparently at prayer, is in a state of grace and would thus go to heaven.
Feedback: The irony here is that Hamlet is wrong about Claudius being in a state of grace because he is at prayer.  Remember that Claudius (as indicated in the previous question) had been unable to pray, since he was "still possessed" of the "gains" of his sin.  Claudius has not confessed, so, as Hamlet says was the case with his father when Claudius killed him, "his crimes [are] broad blown."
Definition
In his soliloquy which follows Claudius' attempt at prayer, Hamlet says that he could kill Claudius at that point, but doing so would be "hire and salary," or unsatisfactory revenge.  Why does he say this?
Term
Leave her to heaven
Feedback: Gertrude does indeed die at the end of the drama when she drinks the poison intended by Laertes and Claudius for Hamlet, but one of the great issues of the play is the degree to which Gertrude is (or is not) complicitous in the death of the old king.  Evidence may be found to support both views:  that she had been aware of and supportive of Claudius as he plotted to kill his brother, her husband, and that she had been unaware of Claudius's plans, and that her marriage to him had been simply the only thing she as a woman could do to keep her place in society.  The theme of The Role of Women is especially prominent in this drama, focussed upon Hamlet's decree, "Frailty, thy name is woman." 
Definition
The Ghost makes his final appearance near the end of Act III, when he appears to Hamlet in Gertrude's "closet" or private apartments.  Apparently, the Ghost is not seen by her.  What does the Ghost instruct Hamlet to do regarding his mother?
Term

While Polonius is hiding behind the arras (wall hanging), Hamlet stabs him, claiming to have mistaken him for a rat.

Feedback: Imagine the staging of this scene:  a rat would almost definitely be on the floor, yet to kill Polonius, Hamlet has to stab him in the body.  Could it be that Hamlet knew he was killing a human?  Note also that Hamlet says to the body of Polonius, "Thou blind, rash, intruding fool, I took thee for thy better," meaning, perhaps, that Hamlet thought it was the King he had stabbed.
Definition
How does Polonius die?
Term
For the King of England to see to the death of Hamlet.
Feedback: Obviously, Hamlet escapes this death.
Definition
Following the killing in the Queen's chamber (or "closet"), the King sends Hamlet in the company of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern to England, and he discloses that he has given orders for what to happen there?
Term
She apparently goes insane and eventually kills herself.
Feedback: Her insanity is marked by some very strange language. What precipatates her descent into insanity?  Her insanity is, of course, real, wheras Hamlet's was not.
Definition
What happens to Ophelia following the killing in the Queen's closet?
Term
The burial of a person who commited suicide and how to determine whether the death was accidental or a suicide.

Feedback: Note that during this discussion, a skull is unearthed, and later, Hamlet speculates on the meaning of life and death while examining the skull (which he believes is the skull of the court jester who helped raise him).
Definition
The two "Clowns" (a term used in Shakespearean plays to refer to people of the very lowest working class, in this case gravediggers) are discussing a weighty theological issue as they dig Ophelia's grave. What topic are they discussing?
Term
  [image]  

The first two of these.

Feedback: During class, the elements of Revenge Tragedy will be part of the discussion.  Revenge Tragedies were very popular on the stage during the time of Shakespeare, the late 16th and early 17th centuries, and it is likely that in Hamlet, Shakespeare may have been trying to "give the people what they want," much the same way television networks tend to imitate what has been successful on other networks. This last scene of Hamlet, with many dead bodies, is typical of such plays, as are other elements, such as the appearance of a ghost who calls for revenge of a murder mistakenly believed to be a natural death; instances of insanity, either real or feigned; and the need for "perfect revenge"--the death of the soul as well as the body--which explains why Hamlet chooses not to kill the King while he is at prayer and in a state of grace..
Definition
When Laertes returns, he is bent upon revenge for the death of his father and wishes to accost Hamlet and kill him directly.  What scheme does the king devise for the revenge rather than outright murder?
Term
Liberality
Definition
Generosity
Term
Parsimony  
Definition
Stengy
Term
Idea of hell on earth     
Definition
Great terror and great fear
Term
Carpe diem
Definition
Seize the day
Term
Ephemeral
Definition
Not lasting long, goes away quickly, like clouds and butterflies
Term
Canon  
Definition
What we all have experience with (shared notion)
Term
Gothic
Definition
Tend to make you look up...pointing at God
Term
England
Definition
16th century the drama...W. Shakespear
Term
Italy
Definition
14th century...
Term
Primum mobile
Definition
First mover...set all galazies in motion...makes the world go around
Term
Change
Definition
The only thing we can be sure of
Term
Botticelli
Definition
Wrote Decameran
Term
Chaucer
Definition
Medeival
Term
Boticelli
Definition
Renaissance
Term
Vernacular
Definition
The people could see what the scripture really said
Term
Virtue, virutous
Definition
Used to mean male...one who excercises power
Term
Know what your left hand is doing
Definition
Don't let your right hand ? ?
Term
Revenge tragedy
Definition
Hamlet was a _____ _______
Term
Revenge tragedy
Definition
Someone has been murdered but no one else realizes the death has taken place...justice cannot kick in. A ____ _____
Term
Perfect revenge
Definition
Not just killing the body, but also the soul
Term
Four reasons ghots appear
Definition

1. Good deed

2. Extorting treasure

3. Revenge

4. Prediction 

Term
Incest
Definition
Gertrude and Claudius was ____ to everyone
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