Key quotes for Twelfth night, ibsen and chaucer

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  • Created by: jroe99
  • Created on: 07-06-18 10:23
Where January finds May
'sette in a commnune marketplace'
1 of 55
January's appearance
'with thikke brustles of his berd unsofte'
2 of 55
May's appearance
'hir fresshe beautee and hir age tendre'
3 of 55
Consumation
'the bryde was broght to abedde as still as stoon'
4 of 55
How January feels
'He wepeth and he wayleth'
5 of 55
Pregnant May
'a womman in my pit'
6 of 55
May's plot
'in warm wex hath emprented the clyket'
7 of 55
January's blindness
'as blynd as is a stoon'
8 of 55
The affair
'Gan pullen up the smok, and in he thrung'
9 of 55
Patriarchy
'tayk a wyf'
10 of 55
Dr Rank's illness as an effect on Helmer
'like a cloudy background to our sunlit happiness'
11 of 55
After Helmer finds the letter
'miserable creature- what have you done?'
12 of 55
Helmer scolding May
'no religion, no morality, no sense of duty'
13 of 55
Appearance
'all that concerns us is... the appearance'
14 of 55
Once they are saved
'you too, of course, we are both saved'
15 of 55
Helmer 'protecting' Nora
'I have broad wings to shelter you under'
16 of 55
Nora commenting on herself as a doll
'he played with me just as I used to play with my doll'
17 of 55
Their house
'a room furnished comfortably and tastefully but not extravagantly'
18 of 55
Nora's initial defiance
'eats one or too, then goes cautiously to her husband's door and listens'
19 of 55
Inherited moral disease
'It is in the blood; for indeed it is true that you inherit these things, Nora'
20 of 55
Nora saying how she would not defy Helmer
'I should not think of going against your wishes'
21 of 55
Helmer belitting Nora
'you are a child, Nora'
22 of 55
Nora reflecting on the letter's effects on Helmer
'how painful and humiliating it would be for Torvald'
23 of 55
Nora if she left
'quite free from care'
24 of 55
Krogstad and Nora
'nothing worse than what you have done'
25 of 55
Torvald on their position
'there is no hope for us now'
26 of 55
First line of chaucer
'wepying and wayling, care and other sorwe'
27 of 55
January on marriage
'for wedlock is so esy and clene'
28 of 55
Merchant's wife
'I have a wyf, the worste that may be'
29 of 55
Deceiving the men
'as bisy as bees... us sely men for to deceyve'
30 of 55
First line of twelfth night
'if musice be the food of love, play on'
31 of 55
Disguise
'with a beauteous wall, doth off close in pollution'
32 of 55
Malvolio's fooling
'Now you see, sir, how your fooling grows old, and people dislike it'
33 of 55
Olivia falling in love
'even so quickly may one catch the plague?'
34 of 55
Malvolio's revenge
'I'll be revenged on the pack of you'
35 of 55
Olivia commenting on Malvolio's treatment
'he hath been most notoriously abused'
36 of 55
Orsino's immense love
'there is no woman's side, can bide the beating of so strong a passion'
37 of 55
Malvolio after receiving the letter
'I will read political authors, I will baffle Sir Toby, I will wash off gross acquaintancw'
38 of 55
Orsino and his love
'thou never shouldst love woman like to me'
39 of 55
Viola on her brother
'my brother he is in Elysium'
40 of 55
Viola's disguise
'conceal me what I am'
41 of 55
Viola's love for Orsino
'whoe'er I woo, myself would be his wife'
42 of 55
Orsino commenting how feminine Cesario is
'Diana's lips is not more smooth and rubious'
43 of 55
Orsino on young women
'for women are as roses... doth fall that very hour'
44 of 55
The prank
'I will drop in his way some obscure epistles of love'
45 of 55
Feste manipulating words
'words are very rascals since bonds disgraced them'
46 of 55
Feste as jester
'her corrupter of words'
47 of 55
Sir Andrew on Olivia's choice in men
'she'll not match above her degree'
48 of 55
Malvolio questioning his superiors
'My masters, are you mad?'
49 of 55
Toby on grief
'I am sure care's an enemy to life'
50 of 55
Maria on Malvolio
'he is a kind of puritan'
51 of 55
Viola admitting her disguise
'I am not what I am'
52 of 55
Olivia's grief
'water once a day her chamber round with eye offending brine'
53 of 55
Maria calling Malvolio mad
'he is but mad'
54 of 55
Feste and Olivia joking
'Take the fool away' - 'Do you not hear, fellows? Take away the Lady'
55 of 55

Other cards in this set

Card 2

Front

January's appearance

Back

'with thikke brustles of his berd unsofte'

Card 3

Front

May's appearance

Back

Preview of the front of card 3

Card 4

Front

Consumation

Back

Preview of the front of card 4

Card 5

Front

How January feels

Back

Preview of the front of card 5
View more cards

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