If I post questions that are excerpts from war books and which are not intelligible to me, will these questions be accepted and answered? Are questions asked from detective stories and thrillers well received?
William Shakespeare wrote a short story "Taming of the shrew"
I think this conversely likens to a Carpenters song "sometimes it takes the strength of a woman" Though This is opposite thinking. What does this line mean? I would like to know, Does this mean a woman will have to gather strength t...
If I post questions that are excerpts from war books and which are not intelligible to me, will these questions be accepted and answered? Are questions asked from detective stories and thrillers well received?
During the Spanish Golden Age of the arts, one of the key figures in Spanish literature was Lope de Vega, a prolific author of plays, poetry, and novels. He was approximately contemporary with William Shakespeare (Vega 1562-1635, Shakespeare 1564-1616), and in some alternate-history fiction they ...
At first I thought this was going to be pointless pedantry about how 210 isn't close enough to 300, and the answer would be along the lines of "Dumas wasn't a mathematician". But then I realised the figure was off by a whole order of magnitude, and in the end you've discovered an interesting mistake. +1. — Rand al'Thor ♦Mar 3 '19 at 6:38
In Chapter Thirteen of The Prince and the Pauper we have the following observation about sewing practices:
He did as men have always done, and probably always will do, to the end of time – held the needle still, and tried to thrust the thread through the eye, which is the opposite of a woman's w...
Scholarly editions of Shakespeare's works always discuss real or potential sources for the plots and other aspects of a play or poem. Shakespeare invented very few plots and used sources such as Thomas North's translation of Plutarch's Lives, Arthur Golding's translation of Ovid's Metamorphoses, ...
I am reading Dante's Divine Commedy. In many cantos, souls predict Dante's future, and it is said that God knows everything past, present and future and that souls can enter heaven only if they are chosen by God with his grace.
I wonder where is free will in all this?
In "The Blue Scarab" in Dr. Thorndyke's Case-Book by R. Austin Freeman, Mr. Blowgrave, whose deed-box was stolen, was talking to Dr. Thorndyke:
"The story concerns my great-grandfather Silas Blowgrave, and his doings during the war with France. It seems that he commanded a privateer of which he ...
@Bookworm I was thinking this seems to be more of a broad religious/philosophical question than really about the Divine Comedy or literature as such. Turns out it can be answered with reference to Dante's text as well as the wider context of Christianity. +1 to @Tsundoku.