112 Matching Annotations
  1. Apr 2019
    1. Between Thee and the Woman I will put Enmitie, and between thine and her Seed; [ 180 ] Her Seed shall bruise thy head, thou bruise his heel.

      I believe that this is a prophecy that Mary (the second Eve) and Jesus (being the seed) comes and defeats Satan once and for all. A prophecy to the new testament.

    2. perturbation

      anxiety; mental uneasiness.

    3. Sin and Death

      Death corrupts all living things, causing them to die and Sin corrupts the thoughts of the human mind, causing them to sin.

    4. ccording to the Track that Satan first made; then preparing for Earth, they meet him proud

      A bridge that Satan made to connect from heaven and earth. "They" is referring to Sin and Death.

    5. Omniscient

      knowing everything.. or perspicacious?

    6. Pandemonium

      Pandæmonium is the capital of Hell in John Milton's epic poem Paradise Lost. "Pandæmonium" stems from the Greek "παν", meaning "all" or "every", and "δαιμόνιον", meaning "little spirit", "little angel", or, as Christians interpreted it, "little daemon", and later, "demon" source, wiki...paradise lost

    7. gratulation

      A feeling of happiness and satisfaction; joy, especially at one's good fortune

    8. Son

      I wonder which son? I don't remember this in the bible...

    9. .

      God simply allowed it... The angles were guiltless as they came to know that he allowed it.

    1. Proceeded thus to ask his Heav’nly Guest

      Adam felt that he was not fit to hear the story of creation.

    2. So unimaginable as hate in Heav’n,

      It is said that, Lucifer, before he became Satan, he was the most beautiful Angel of heaven. And he became impressed by his intelligence, power, and position that he began to desire for himself the honor and glory that belonged to God.

    3. consorted Eve

      Eve will forever, in these writings, be known as the tempter of man. Although man has the same blame.

    4. hoarce

      (of a person's voice) sounding rough and harsh, typically as the result of a sore throat or of shouting.

    5. Diurnal Spheare

      Diurnal motion (Latin: diurnus, lit. 'daily', from dies, lit. "day") is an astronomical term referring to the apparent motion of celestial objects (e.g. the Sun and stars) around Earth, or more precisely around the two celestial poles, over the course of one day.

    6. Bellerophon

      Bellerophon was a famous Greek hero, mostly known for defeating Chimera, a fire-breathing mythical monster. He was also recognised by riding white Pegasus which was a sort of a gift from Athena for his devotion to the goddess-ttps://www.greek-gods.org/greek-heroes/bellerophon.php

    1. Canaan

      Canaan was one of the sons of Noah, and he ended seeing Noah's private parts and so... YEAH. According to Genesis 9:20-27, Noah became drunk then cursed his grandson Canaan, for the transgression of Canaan's father, Ham. This is the Curse of Canaan, to which the misnomer[8] "Curse of Ham" has been attached since Classical antiquity.[9]- source/ wiki,Canaan(son of Ham)

    2. Paradise

      The Garden of Eve

    1. If obedience to parents be immediately due by a natural law, and subjection to princes but by the mediation of a human ordinance, what reason is there that the laws of nature should give place to the laws of men, as we see the power of the father over his child gives place and is subordinate to the power of the magistrate?

      So basically what I'm interpreting is that the people have the right to be taken care of by their government but we shouldn't stick our noses where they don't belong.

    2. progenitors

      An ancestor or parent

    3. These acts of judging in capital crimes, of making war, and concluding peace, are the chiefest marks of “sovereignty” that are found in any monarch.

      The citizens are better off under monarch rule.

    4. grandfather

      GOD, essentially...

    5. Papists

      A Roman Catholic

    6. Robert Filmer: From Patriarcha

      The Patriarcha was published posthumously in 1680.

    1. Spider-men,

      A bunch of Peter Parkers?? Noice.

    2. they spake to each other in a language which the Lady did not understand

      totes called it.

    3. hey went upright as men;

      five bucks they can talk, too.

    4. that no Creature can

      Sounds like this story is going to have talking critters...

    5. Covetous

      you shall NOT covet thy neighbor!

    1. Eve’s

      The name Eve means "mother of all living things." Genesis 3:28

    2. That we (poore women) must endure it all;

      The good Lort said to the woman "I will surely multiply your pain in childbearing; in pain you you shall be contrary to your husband- Genesis 3:16

    3. was deliuered vnto me in sleepe many yeares before I had any intent to write in this maner

      I love dream interpretations, always interesting what you dream isn't always what you think. True outcries of the subconscious mind.

    1. The subjection which is required of a wife to her husband implieth two things: 1. That she acknowledge her husband to be her superiour. 2. That she respect him as her superiour. That acknowledgement of the husband’s superiority is twofold:

      I'm really glad that, for the most part, we no longer see women in this way. Super misogynistic. Yes, in parts the man is the "head of the house hold" but that it is obviously interchangeable now a days. In my honest opinion, I would love to share that role with my wife.

    2. for I esteem little of the malice of women.

      oxymoron much?

    3. that all the wit I have will not quench the one nor quiet the other.

      So far from reading and listening to the feedback in class, this gentlemen seems to be coming from an anecdote.

    4. . For doubt lest this little spark kindle into such a flame

      I feel like women can be passionate. Which is always a good thing.

    1. 107. Psalme, directed mee to the 23 & 24 verses,

      I feel like they were motivated by this passage, seeing the glories wonders that the good Lord made.

  2. Mar 2019
    1. heretofore most studious of the Mathematiques, of Philosophie, and of Astrologie: but these artes

      They seem like a very perspicacious people.

    2. guile

      sly or cunning intelligence.

    3. haue vsed.

      Dying from not eating and drinking?

    1. Acting by others’ action;

      This line makes me think of how religion has always been a factor in influencing how kings and countries act and want to have their belief/faith be the supreme religion...

    2. and murderer of repose,

      There are many things that can murder repose, love can be definitely disrupt a man's life.

    3. the oracle of lies

      This line paints a picture of how lies can be ambiguous

    1. Burn this letter, for it is too dangerous

      was the letter burned by Bothwell? Or forged by the Scottish Lords who opposed her rule?

    2. Send me word whether you will have it, and more money, and when I shall return, and how far I may speak.

      Asking Bothwell to inform her when she may return to Scotland.

    3. hap,

      luck;fortune

    4. and you make me to almost play the part of a traitor.

      Here, I believe that Mary is speaking out of guilt. She feels as a "traitor" because she seemed to be an accomplice of Lord Bothwell... There is a lot of mystery and foul play with the "casket letters." 'Written' by Mary.

    5. beguile

      charm or enchant (someone), sometimes in a deceptive way.

    6. and that he would persuade me to pursue some of them

      love makes you do crazy things, but to be influenced to kill your husband?

    7. for (to tell it between us two) the Lords wished no ill to him

      I feel as if she's stating that her and Bothwell wished no ill towards Lord Darnley.

    1. meed

      A deserved share or reward

    2. durst

      Dared

    3. Forsooth, I had liefer see you be slain than we should turn again to our uncleanness.”

      The ultimate betrayal. But if you’re married you’re not involved in premarital sex...

    4. commune

      Share one’s intimate thoughts or feelings with (someone), especially on a spiritual level.

    5. anon

      Shortly

    6. witness thereof she bit her own hand so violently that it was seen all her life after

      Is this how the urban legend “la Mano peluda” came to be?

    7. a swallowed her in, sometime ramping at her, sometime threatening her, sometime pulling her and hauling her both night and day the foresaid time. And also the devils cried upon her with great threatenings and bade her she should forsake her Christendom, her faith, and deny her God, his Mother, and all the saints in Heaven, her good works and all good virtues, her father, her mother, and all her friends.

      She’s been consumed by the demons and evil spirits in her head. That or dementia.

    8. burgess

      An inhabitant of a town or borough with full rights of citizenship

    1. Sir Bors

      Sir Bors? Or Sir BRO? Okay, I'll stop now. But in a serious note, These Knights are all about looking out for each other. Despite Sir Launcelot sleeping with King Arthur's Queen, almost everyone doesn't believe the other two brothers, or have a hard time believing them; like the King. Despite him doing this, I think the moral of the story is: One man's bad dead does not truly define him.

  3. Feb 2019
    1. and therefore we will prove it, that he is a traitor to your person.

      Snitches get stitches.

    2. dole

      sorrow; mourning.

    3. No more will I, said Sir Gareth and Sir Gaheris, for we will never say evil by that man; for because, said Sir Gareth, Sir Launcelot made me knight, by no manner owe I to say ill of him:

      I believe that the Knight's code is synonymous with the Bro code. Don't speak ill towards thy bro-errr, knight.

    4. for I will lain it no longer

      I like Sir Gawaine, talking the high road, being a true bro.

    5. slew

      turn or slide violently or uncontrollably in a particular direction.

    6. ye must remember how ofttimes Sir Launcelot hath rescued the king and the queen; and the best of us all had been full cold at the heart-root had not Sir Launcelot been better than we, and that hath he proved himself full oft.

      So it seems that Sir Launcelot isn't such a bad guy. Maybe they covet his bravery and selflessness?

    7. there will many kings and great lords hold with Sir Launcelot.

      Sir Launcelot is rolling DEEP with the kings and great Lords.

    8. I marvel that we all be not ashamed both to see and to know how Sir Launcelot lieth daily and nightly by the queen,

      I feel like they should let Sir Launcelot live his life and do as he will with his, paramour?

    1. apothecary

      a person who prepared and sold medicines and drugs.

    2. irascibility

      irascible. If you're irascible, you get angry easily — perhaps blowing up in rage when someone brushes into you. Irascible comes from the Latin root ira, which means "anger" or "rage," the same root that gives us the word ire, "anger."

    3. superfluity

      an unnecessarily or excessively large amount or number of something.

    4. niggard

      a stingy or ungenerous person.

    5. Within our yard, I saw there a strange beast Was like a dog, and he’d have made a feast 135 Upon my body, and have had me dead. His colour yellow was and somewhat red; And tipped his tail was, as were both his ears, With black, unlike the rest, as it appears; His snout was small and gleaming was each eye. 140 Remembering how he looked, almost I die; And all this caused my groaning, I confess.”

      Chaucer liked to write about "dream poems." I'm excited to see what interpretation they come up with for Chanticleer's dream.

    6. Fie

      used to express disgust or outrage.

    7. aghast

      filled with horror or shock.

    8. blithe

      happy or joyous

    9. By Heaven’s king, Who for us all has died, I should, before this, have fallen down for sleep,

      I find this hilarious.

    1. musty ale,

      I've never had Ale. Must be good stuff if it gets these characters to spill the beans... Maybe I shouldn't drink Ale.

    2. Then do I sharpen well my tongue and sting

      The Good Word says to tame the tongue.

    3. avarice

      extreme greed for wealth or material gain.

    4. But whoso finds himself without such blame, 100 He will come up and offer, in God’s nam

      Yup, he excluded them.

    5. That’s made her husband into a cuckold, Such folk shall have no power and no grace To offer to my relics in this place.

      Is he excluding the woman that cheat on their husbands? My inner feminist is upset.

    6. His beasts and all his store shall multiply.

      Prosperity Gospel all day.

    7. anon

      soon; shortly.

    8.   “Dear lords,” said he, “in churches, when I preach, I am at pains that all shall hear my speech, 45 And ring it out as roundly as a bell, For I know all by heart the thing I tell.

      I'm a Christian, but to me, upon reading the summary, reminds me a lot of... No other than, Joel Osteen. Always preaching the prosperity gospel.

      (i.e. Prosperity theology is a religious belief among some Christians, who hold that financial blessing and physical well-being are always the will of God for them, and that faith, positive speech, and donations to religious causes will increase one's material wealth)

    1. gay

      lighthearted and carefree.

    2. He sang then, in his pleasant voice and small

      Has anyone ever serenaded someone before? Asking for a friend.

    3. To look at her he thought a merry life

      You can look at the menu but you can't order... Well, shouldn't order.

    4. As soon as opportunity she could spy. “My husband is so full of jealousy, Unless you will await me secretly, I know I’m just as good as dead,” said she. “You must keep all quite hidden in this case

      No means no but sometimes the ladies have it rough. Gotta improvise, in this case.

    5. sloe

      another term for blackthorn.

    6. She’d thinned out carefully her eyebrows two,

      I feel like I can thin out my eyebrows....

    7. solace

      Tangent- Solace is my favorite word. I feel like we all try to find solace in this life some way or the other. Especially during school. Lol

    8.   “Now by God’s soul,” cried he, “that will not I! 25 For I will speak, or else I’ll go my way.

      That drunkard talk though. hiccups

    1. nightingale

    2. To ride about the world, loved chivalry, Truth, honour, freedom and all courtesy.

      Maybe we need to go back to the Knight's way of life.

    3. anon,

      Soon; shortly.

    4. Then folk do long to go on pilgrimage

      A pilgrimage is a religious journey undertaken for penance and grace. It's also to experience spiritual enlightenment and deeper understanding of their belief's.

    5. When Zephyr also has with his sweet breath, Filled again, in every holt and heath, The tender shoots and leaves, and the young sun

      I like how this celebrates the vitality and richness of spring.

    6. When in April the sweet showers fall

      Ahhh, the return of Spring. What a great opening, we have 27 days, 6 hours, and 51 minutes as of right now. Yes, I'm excited to read a story taking place in the spring.

    1. requite.

      make appropriate return for (a favor, service, or wrongdoing).

    2. mote

      a tiny piece of a substance.

    3. piteously

      deserving or arousing pity.

    4. quell

      put an end to (a rebellion or other disorder), typically by the use of force.

    5. I shall kiss at your command, as befits a knight, and further, lest I displease you, so plead no more.’

      Staying true to the Knight's code.

    6. Then she gave him good day, with a laughing glance, and stunned him as she stood there, with cutting words: ‘May He who speeds each speech reward you this sport! But that you should be Gawain, it baffles the mind.’ ‘Wherefore?’ quoth the knight, and urgently asked, fearful lest he had failed in forms of politeness.

      Persistence is key. Hitting him where it hurts, attacking his gracious and courteous ways.

    7. ‘Indeed, lady,’ quoth the knight, ‘you have done much better; but I am proud of the value you place on me, and, solemnly your servant, my sovereign I hold you, and your knight I become, and Christ reward you!’

      Sir Gawain is taking staying modest and gracious to a whole new level. I really admire Sir Gawain for staying true to himself and keeping it 100.

    8. bayed

      shout loudly, typically to demand something.

    1. Death had come And taken them all in times gone by

      I like how this makes me think about how perpetual time and death are.

    2. cache

      Cache- a collection of items of the same type stored in a hidden or inaccessible place.

    3. The intruder who broached the dragon’s treasure And moved him to wrath had never meant to. It was desperation on the part of a slave Fleeing the heavy hand of some master, Guilt-ridden and on the run, Going to ground. But he soon began To shake with terror…………..in shock The wretch……………………………

      This passage evokes the hardships of life, The part that states “ the intruder who broach the dragon’s treasure and moved him to wrath never meant to-“ Like we discussed in class last night, I feel that the tone sets a reminder of how human nature/behavior works. Regardless of how our actions may leave us feeling with guilt or shaken with terror.

  4. Jan 2019
    1. ‘”The day is good thus,” said Cathbad; “it is certain he will be famous and renowned, who shall take arms therein; but he will be short-lived only.”

      I appreciate this part of the passage because I like how it displays Cathbad's doubts towards Cuchulainn and what he said earlier in the passage. "A warrior should take arms therein whose name should be over Ireland forever, for deed of valour, and his fame should continue forever." Why would Cathbad go as far as to warn Cuchulainn that his fame would be short lived? I feel that Cuchulainn knows that he fame won't last long, if he didn't he wouldn't had gone to seek Conchobar to ask for arms.

    2. Druid

      "A priest, magician, or soothsayer in the ancient Celtic religion.