Tuesday, December 31, 2019
Top-5 Loving Couples in World Literature
Love is one of the strongest human emotions, and it is only natural that it often becomes a centerpiece for a work of fiction. And it is just as natural for loving couples to become the image that remains in peopleââ¬â¢s memory long after they have forgotten most of the plot, supporting characters and details of the book they have read. So here is the set of 5 couples that, arguably, left the most prominent trail in worldââ¬â¢s literature. Heathcliffe and Catherine, from Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte Wuthering Heights is memorable both in itself and because it is such an uncharacteristic a book for the age it was written. The only novel by Emily Bronte, it is nothing like the books written by her sisters and, in fact, anybody in the first half of the 19th century. And the relationship between Heathcliffe and Catherine is just like the rest of the book: it is dark, and painful, and a bit disturbing; certainly something everybody should read about. Romeo and Juliet, from Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare Even people who have never read a word of Shakespeare know about Romeo and Juliet and what these names imply. For centuries they have been a symbol of tragic love, blooming in spite of all adversity, but doomed from the very beginning. Dante and Beatrice, from the Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri Beatrice remains behind the scenes for the majority of the book, but her presence is overpowering. If the very fact that it was a real person, and this real person was the reason for Alighieriââ¬â¢s masterpiece to be written isnââ¬â¢t enough to make it one of the greatest couples in history, it is hard to say what is. Othello and Desdemona, from Othello by William Shakespeare If there was one thing Shakespeare knew how to do, it was creating powerful images of loving and, preferably, doomed couples. Othello and Desdemona lead a blissful life of mutual love and understanding until jealousy gets better of Othello, who kills his wife, believing she has an affair, and then commits suicide on finding out he was wrong. Which is all the more tragic as it is caused by a petty and disgusting schemer Iago. Orpheus and Eurydice, from Greek Mythology It is funny, but almost all famou sliterary loving couples that immediately come to mind have either an impending doom or tortuous relationship underlying their love. There is something about tragic love that happy couples just canââ¬â¢t provide, and Orpheus and Eurydice show that this idea is older than feudalism. Orpheus, according to myth, was the most talented musician in the world who loved nothing more than his wife, Eurydice. When she dies he goes to the Underworld and moves Hades with his music so much that he agrees to let Eurydice follow
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