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Essay heading: Abelard and Heloise
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History |
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| Date added: |
July 17, 1999 |
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3 / 616 |
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0 times |
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Essay content:
She just wanted to be with him, "God knows I never sought anything in you except yourself; I wanted simply you, nothing of yours." He let her have her wish.
Heloise also raises the question of obligation and debt. "How great the debt by which you have bound yourself to us needs neither proof nor witness? Remember, I implore you, what I have done, and think how much you owe me... displayed 300 characters
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"How great the debt by which you have bound yourself to us needs neither proof nor witness? Remember, I implore you, what I have done, and think how much you owe me." He felt obligated to comfort her. In the comparison of the letters there is contrast between Abelard's sureness in the Bible with Heloise's sureness in philosophers... displayed next 300 characters
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