EN 215 Lecture Notes - Lecture 30: Ope, Geoffrey Chaucer, Omnipotence

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Molo(cid:272)h wa(cid:396): molo(cid:272)h ad(cid:448)o(cid:272)ates fo(cid:396) a(cid:374) (cid:862)ope(cid:374) (cid:449)a(cid:396)(cid:863) No(cid:374)e of these help ata(cid:374), (cid:272)a(cid:374)"t a(cid:272)(cid:272)ept defeat o(cid:396) (cid:449)a(cid:396) god is omnipotent. Beelze(cid:271)u(cid:271): we a(cid:396)e goi(cid:374)g to fight, (cid:449)e (cid:449)o(cid:374)"t a(cid:272)(cid:272)ept defeat; (cid:449)e (cid:449)o(cid:374)"t atta(cid:272)k god di(cid:396)e(cid:272)tl(cid:455), (cid:271)ut have defeat over his creation. Uses classical and christian together, the classical reborn in a modern context scylla. Meet death: a shadowy being: death has not definite shape/form and it can come in different forms. It is a concept that has not come into practice yet: kind of like a child that does not know what death is, adam and eve at first did not know what death was. The devil goes through a lot of toil on his way to earth. We see satan by himself in book four and he can expound on his thoughts and feelings more freely than when he was in the public venue as in book 2. Enflamed with rage as he comes down to earth.

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