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1.
It’s about a prince getting betrayed by a female
so he tries to end them all until he meets Scheherazade who tells him stories
every night and end up falling in love.
2.
He does this by always switching it up. I could
tell when the girl was talking versus the prince it was always different.
3.
How she managed to soothe the prince with her
voice and stories as music does to regular people.
4.
Yes, because I could tell exactly what was going
on. The stories went hand in hand together.
5.
Scheherazade was not conceited. She went to the
king to hopefully save the other girls’ lives. She knew she was risking her
own. She was kind and was really good at telling stories. I did like the music
since it captures every aspect of the story.
A masterpiece of 18th century French painting, this work by the French Rococo painter Jean-Antoine Watteau, which is also known asThe Embarkation for Cythera or Pilgrimage to the Island of Cythera, exists in three variants. The first, somewhat stilted version is dated 1710 and hangs in the Stadel institute in Frankfurt. Seven years later Watteau produced a second version, which he submitted as his presentation piece to the Fine Arts Academy in Paris. This Academy version now hangs in the Louvre. A third version, now in the Schloss Charlottenburg, Berlin, was executed in 1718-19 for a private client Jean de Jullienne (it was later acquired by King Frederick II of Prussia), and is a slight variation upon the Louvre picture. The Pilgrimage to Cythera is neither a genre painting nor a landscape painting, but a new type of picture known as La fete galante (a sort of allegory of courtship and falling in love). Influenced by the VenetianGiorgione (1477-1510) and the Flemish master Rubens (1577-1640), Watteau was regarded as one of the greatest Rococo artists, and this painting - which began life as an illustration of Florent Carton Dancourt's minor play The Three Cousins - was his finest work and one of the greatest genre paintings of the 18th century.
Olivia's household hate Malvolio because he is a puritan. AKA a guy who doesn't have any fun and expects the same from his fellow servants. He is a party pooper- no music, no dancing, no acting no fun. In the Elizabethan times people would have hated this! This is why Olivia's household hate him.
Of course, this was all a prejudice but from how Malvolio (Puritan) was treated we can see Shakespeare also disliked Puritans. This could be because Puritans thought enjoying theatre was also unallowed(a sin) and of course Shakespeare would disagree since he wrote plays for theatres.