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''
 
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** ''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 07:59, 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 MacbethIssy 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