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ANEK [815]
3 years ago
7

I WILL GIVE BRAINLIEST

English
1 answer:
Dafna11 [192]3 years ago
8 0
In Hamlet Shakespeare consistently uses images of rottenness,
vileness, and corruption. From the play's start, we know "something is
rotten in the state of Denmark," (1.5.100) and we learn that this
rottenness stems from the unnatural murder of King Hamlet by Claudius'
use of poison. Claudius corrupts Gertrude with his poison, and then
specific language of gardens and flowers links Gertrude to Ophelia.
Because of Hamlet's interaction with Ophelia in relation to Claudius'
interaction with Gertrude, and because of the linguistic link between
Ophelia and Gertrude, we begin to look at Hamlet as if he were doing
the same vile deeds as Claudius. ..
...And in answer to Claudius asking him what he means, Hamlet says: ... Right after that, in Act 1, sc. 5, the ghost refers to foulness, or rottenness, when he says, in some of his first words to Hamlet, "Revenge his foul and most unnatural murder"
theme= death, and decay, and visusniss.
that's all I can think of.
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Whatever we make of the substance of Judge Andrew Rutherford's ruling in the Cornish private hotel case, his citation of a striking and controversial opinion by Lord Justice Laws – delivered in another religious freedom case in 2010 – is worth pausing over. The owners of the Chymorvah hotel were found to have discriminated against a gay couple by refusing them a double-bedded room. They had appealed to their right to manifest their religious belief by running their hotel according to Christian moral standards. Given the drift of recent legal judgments in cases where equality rights are thought to clash with religious freedom rights, it is no surprise that the gay couple won their case.

But quite apart from the merits of the case, judges should be warned off any future reliance on the ill-considered opinions about law and religion ventured last year by Lord Justice Laws. Laws rightly asserted that no law can justify itself purely on the basis of the authority of any religion or belief system: "The precepts of any one religion – any belief system – cannot, by force of their religious origins, sound any louder in the general law than the precepts of any other."

A sound basis for this view is Locke's terse principle, in his Letter on Toleration, that "neither the right nor the art of ruling does necessarily carry with it the certain knowledge of other things; and least of all the true religion".

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