Difference between revisions of "All's fair in vanessy"
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* '''Inverness:''' the location of Macbeth's castle and the scene of Duncan's murder in Shakespeare's ''Macbeth'' | * '''Inverness:''' the location of Macbeth's castle and the scene of Duncan's murder in Shakespeare's ''Macbeth'' | ||
− | + | ** ''Fair is foul and foul is fair'', the three witches say in Act I, Scene I. | |
− | ''Fair is foul and foul is fair'', the three witches say in Act I, Scene I. | ||
− | |||
** the three witches of ''Macbeth'' → [[Issy]] and her two personalities | ** the three witches of ''Macbeth'' → [[Issy]] and her two personalities | ||
Latest revision as of 06:59, 10 November 2013
- all is fair in love and war (proverbial)
- all is vanity → Ecclesiastes 1.2: "Vanity of vanities, says the Preacher, all is vanity"
- Vanity Fair: a year-long fair in John Bunyan's allegorical novel Pilgrim's Progress, established by Beelzebub, Apollyon and Legion in the town of Vanity
- Vanity Fair, a Novel without a Hero: a novel by William Makepeace Thackeray
- Vanity Fair may have no hero, but it features two heroines: the virtuous Amelia Sedley and the scheming Becky Sharp → Issy's twin personalities
- vanity mirror: Issy's mirror
- "Mirror, Mirror, on the wall, who is the fairest of them all?"
- Inverness: the location of Macbeth's castle and the scene of Duncan's murder in Shakespeare's Macbeth
- Fair is foul and foul is fair, the three witches say in Act I, Scene I.
- the three witches of Macbeth → Issy and her two personalities
- Inver: bay, inlet → bay window → this, the fifth of seven clauses in this paragraph, corresponds to "bend of bay" in the first paragraph → the 5th of 7 elements in a second circuit of HCE's bedroom
- Vanessa: Jonathan Swift's name for Hester Vanhomrigh, one of his two mistresses → Vanessy