Symbolism, Imagery and Allegory in Measure for Measure

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AS - Level English Fichas sobre Symbolism, Imagery and Allegory in Measure for Measure, creado por dotty.h el 05/04/2016.
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Pregunta Respuesta
What Animal does the Duke compare his citizens to? "We have strict statutes and most biting laws./The needful bits and curbs to headstrong weeds,/Which for this nineteen years we have let slip;" - The Duke compares his unruly citizens who's defiance has given rise to fornication and prostitution to to headstrong horses.
What contextual quote utilises similar imagery? "Give a wild horse the liberty of the head never so little and he will run headlong to thine and his own destruction also. [...] So correct Children in their tender years." English Puritan Phillip Stubbes 'The Anatomy of Abuses' (1587), why you should punish children.
When and why does Angelo describe himself as a horse? "I have begun / And now I give my sensual race the rein" (2.4.24). In other words, Angelo sees his pursuit of Isabella as a "sensual race" and says he can't control himself, which is why he gives in to unbridled desire.
When does the idea of a wild horse come up again in Measure for Measure? There's a similar metaphor at work in The Taming of the Shrew, where Petruchio's "taming" of "wild Kate" is often compared to a horse being broken in.
What does Angelo describe illegitimate children to? "Stamps" - counterfeit coins.
Why does he describe them as this? Children were often described as being stamped or impressed by their fathers' images, much like metal coins were imprinted by images before being put into circulation + Sexual reproduction and coin fraud were both capital crimes in Shakespeare's UK.
What is strange about this? Angelo is frequently likened to coins (his name even, is associated with "angel" or "nobel-angel", a type of gold coin bearing the image of St. Michael.
When does Angelo liken himself to a coin? When the Duke announces that Angelo will be his deputy, Angelo likens himself to a metal coin that should be tested for its value and worth: "Now, good my lord, /Let there be some more test made of my metal,/ Before so noble and so great a figure / Be stamp'd upon it. (1.1.2)"
Whats is he referencing when he talks about testing his metal? In the sixteenth century, a coin's value was based upon the value of the metal from which it was made.
Who else likens Angelo to a coin? Escalus: "I am sorry, one so learned and so wise/As you, Lord Angelo, have still appear'd,/Should slip so grossly, both in the heat of blood./And lack of temper'd judgment afterward. (5.1.14)"
What is the reference? A 'slip' is a counterfeit coin, and also means to make a mistake.
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