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Does Shakespeare make this believeable as a genuine experience?

2006-10-07 12:14:34 · 1 answers · asked by Stanfordguy 1 in Arts & Humanities Books & Authors

1 answers

Oliver reforms and stops plotting to kill his brother, and becomes his best friend.

The duke reforms and stops plotting to kill/exile Rosalind and her father, and gives up his dukedom to live in the forest and meditate.

Not very believable, either of them, but Shakespeare wasn't above pulling deus-ex-machinas like that so the curtain rang down on a tidily wrapped, full resolved package.

2006-10-07 12:24:50 · answer #1 · answered by blueprairie 4 · 0 0

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