836 lines
23 KiB
Plaintext
836 lines
23 KiB
Plaintext
THIRTY-SEVEN DRAMATIC SITUATIONS
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1. SUPPLICATION (To humbly petition). Elements: a persecutor, a humble
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petitioner, and a power in authority whose decision is doubtful.
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A1 Fugitives imploring the powerful for help against their enemies.
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A2 Assistance implored for the performance of a pious duty which has been
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forbidden.
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A3 Appeals for refuge in which to die.
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B1 Hospitality besought by the shipwrecked.
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B2 Charity entreated by those cast off by their own people, whom they have
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disgraced.
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B3 Expiation: the seeking of pardon, healing or deliverance.
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B4 The surrender of a corpse, or relic, solicited.
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C1 Supplication of the powerful for those dear to the suppliant.
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C2 Supplication to a relative in behalf of another relative.
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C3 Supplication to a mother's lover, in her behalf.
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2. DELIVERANCE. Elements: an unfortunate, a threatener, a rescuer.
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A Appearance of a rescuer to the condemned.
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B1 A parent replaced on the throne by his children.
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B2 Rescue by friends, or by strangers grateful for benefits or hospitality.
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3. CRIME PUNISHED BY VENGEANCE. Elements: an avenger and a criminal.
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A1 The avenging of a slain parent or ancestor.
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A2 The avenging of a slain child or descendant.
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A3 Vengeance for a child dishonored.
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A4 The avenging of a slain wife or husband.
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A5 Vengeance for the dishonor, or the attempted dishonoring, of a wife.
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A6 Vengeance for a mistress slain.
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A7 Vengeance for a slain or injured friend.
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A8 Vengeance for a sister seduced.
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B1 Vengeance for intentional injury or spoilation.
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B2 Vengeance for having been dispoiled during absence.
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B3 Revenge for an attempted slaying.
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B4 Revenge for a false accusation.
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B5 Vengeance for violation.
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B6 Vengeance for having been robbed of one's own.
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B7 Revenge upon a whole sex for a deception by one.
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C Professional pursuit of criminals.
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4. VENGEANCE TAKEN FOR KINDRED UPON KINDRED. Elements: Avenging kinsman,
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guilty kinsman, remembrance of the victim, a relative of both.
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A1 A father's death avenged upon a mother.
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A2 A mother avenged upon a father.
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B A brother's death avenged upon a son.
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C A father's death avenged upon a husband.
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D A husband's death avenged upon a father.
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5. PURSUIT. Elements: Punishment and fugitive.
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A Fugitives from justice pursued for crimes, political offenses, etc.
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B Pursued for a fault of love.
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C A hero struggling against a power.
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D A pseudo-madman struggling against an alienist.
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6. DISASTER. Elements: A vanquished power, a victorious enemy or a
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messenger.
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A1 Defeat suffered.
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A2 A fatherland destroyed.
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A3 The fall of humanity.
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A4 A natural catastrophe.
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B A monarch overthrown.
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C1 Ingratitude suffered.
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C2 The suffering of unjust punishment or enmity.
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C3 An outrage suffered.
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D1 Abandonment by a lover or a husband.
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D2 Children lost by their parents.
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7. FALLING PREY TO CRUELTY OR MISFORTUNE. Elements: an Unfortunate; a Master
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or a Misfortune.
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A The innocent made the victim of ambitious intrigue.
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B The innocent despoiled by those who should protect.
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C1 The powerful dispossessed and wretched.
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C2 A favorite or an intimate finds himself forgotten.
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D The unfortunate robbed of their only hope.
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8. REVOLT. Elements: Tyrant and Conspirator.
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A1 A conspiracy chiefly of one individual.
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A2 A conspiracy of several.
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B1 Revolt of one individual, who influences and involves others.
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B2 A revolt of many.
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9. DARING ENTERPRISE. Elements: A bold leader, an object, an adversary.
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A Preparations for war.
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B1 War.
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B2 Combat.
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C1 Carrying off a desired person or object.
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C2 Recapture of a desired object.
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D1 Adventurous expeditions.
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D2 Adventure undertaken for the purpose of obtaining a beloved woman.
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10. ABDUCTION. Elements: The abductor, the abducted, the guardian.
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A Abduction of an unwilling woman.
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B Abduction of a consenting woman.
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C1 Recapture of the woman without the slaying of the abductor.
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C2 The same case, with the slaying of the ravisher.
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D1 Rescue of a captive friend.
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D2 Of a child.
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D3 Of a soul in captivity to error.
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11. THE ENIGMA. Elements: Interrogator, seeker, and problem.
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A Search for a person who must be found on pain of death.
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B1 A riddle to be solved on pain of death.
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B2 The same case, in which the riddle is proposed by the coveted woman.
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C1 Temptations suffered with the object of discovering his name.
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C2 Temptations offered with the object of ascertaining the sex.
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C3 Tests for the purpose of ascertaining the mental condition.
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12. OBTAINING. Elements: A solicitor and an adversary who is refusing, or
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an arbitrator opposing parties.
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A Efforts to obtain an object by ruse or force.
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B Endeavor by means of persuasive eloquence along.
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C Eloquence with an arbitrator.
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13. ENMITY OF KINSMEN. Elements: A malevolent kinsman, a hated or
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reciprocally hating kinsman.
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A Hatred of brothers:
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A1 One brother hated by several.
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A2 Reciprocal hatred.
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A3 Hatred between relatives for reasons of self-interest.
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B Hatred of father and son:
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B1 Of the son for the father.
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B2 Mutual hatred.
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B3 Hatred of daughter for father.
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C Hatred of grandfather for grandson.
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D Hatred of father-in-law for son-in-law.
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E Hatred of mother-in-law for son-in-law.
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F Infanticide.
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14. RIVALRY OF KINSMEN. Elements: the preferred kinsman, the rejected
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kinsman, and the object.
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A1 Malicious rivalry of a brother.
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A2 Malicious rivalry of two brothers.
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A3 Rivalry of two brothers, with adultery on the part of one.
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A4 Rivalry of sisters.
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B1 Rivalry of father and son, for an unmarried woman.
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B2 Rivalry of father and son, for a married woman.
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B3 Case similar to the two foregoing, but in which the object is already
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the wife of the father.
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B4 Rivalry of mother and daughter.
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C Rivalry of cousins.
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D Rivalry of friends.
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15. MURDEROUS ADULTERY. Elements: Two adulterers, betrayed husband or wife.
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A1 The slaying of a husband by or for a paramour.
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A2 The slaying of a trusting lover.
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B Slaying of a wife for a paramour, and in self-interest.
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16. MADNESS. Elements: Madman and victim.
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A1 Kinsman slain in madness.
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A2 A lover slain in madness.
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A3 Slaying or injuring of a person not hated.
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B Disgrace brought upon oneself through madness.
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C Loss of loved ones brought about by madness.
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D Madness brought on by fear of hereditary insanity.
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17. FATAL IMPRUDENCE. Elements: The imprudent, the victim or the object
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lost.
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A1 Imprudence the cause of one's own misfortune.
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A2 Imprudence the cause of one's own dishonor.
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B1 Curiosity the cause of one's own misfortune.
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B2 Loss of the possession of a loved one, through curiosity.
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C1 Curiosity the cause of death or misfortune to others.
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C2 Imprudence the cause of a relative's death.
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C3 Imprudence the cause of a lover's death.
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C4 Credulity the cause of kinsman's death.
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18. OEDIPAL. Elements: The lover, the loved, and the revealer.
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A1 Discovery that one has married one's mother.
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A2 Discovery that one has had one's sister as mistress.
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B1 Discovery that one has married one's sister.
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B2 The same case, in which the crime has been villainously planned by a
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third person.
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B3 Being upon the point of taking one's sister, unknowingly, as a mistress.
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C Being upon the point of violating, unknowingly, a daughter.
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D1 Being upon the point of committing an adultery, unknowingly.
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D2 Adultery committed unknowingly.
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19. SLAYING OF A KINSMAN UNRECOGNIZED. Elements: The slayer, the
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unrecognized victim.
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A1 Being upon the point of slaying a daughter unknowingly, by command of a
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divinity or an oracle.
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A2 Through political necessity.
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A3 Through a rivalry in love.
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A4 Through hatred of the lover of the unrecognized daughter.
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B1 Being upon the point of killing a son unknowingly.
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B2 The same as case B1, strengthened by Machiavellian instigations.
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B3 The same as case B2, intermixed with hatred of kinsmen.
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C Being upon the point of killing one's brother unknowingly:
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C1 Brothers slaying in anger.
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C2 A sister slaying through professional duty.
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D Slaying of a mother unrecognized.
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E1 A father slain unknowingly through Machiavellian advice.
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E2 The simple slaying of a father unrecognized.
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E3 The same case reduced from murder to simple insult.
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F1 A grandfather slain unknowingly, in vengeance and through instigation.
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F2 Slain involuntarily.
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F3 A father-in-law killed involuntarily.
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G1 Involuntary killing of a loved woman.
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G2 Upon the point of killing a lover unrecognized.
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G3 Failure to rescue an unrecognized son.
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20. SELF-SACRIFICING FOR AN IDEAL. Elements: The hero, the ideal, the
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creditor or the person or things sacrificed.
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A1 Sacrifice of life for the sake of one's word.
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A2 Life sacrificed for the success of one's people.
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A3 Life sacrificed for the happiness of one's people.
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A4 Life sacrificed in filial piety.
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A5 Life sacrificed for the sake of one's faith.
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B1 Both love and life sacrificed for the sake of a cause.
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B2 Love sacrificed to interests of state.
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C Sacrifice of well-being to duty.
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D The ideal of honor sacrificed to the ideal of faith.
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21. SELF-SACRIFICE FOR KINDRED. Elements: The hero, the kinsman, the
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creditor or the person or thing sacrificed.
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A1 Life sacrificed for that of a relative or loved one.
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A2 Life sacrificed for the happiness of a relative or loved one.
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B1 Ambition sacrificed for the happiness of a parent.
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B2 Ambition sacrificed for the life of a parent.
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C1 Love sacrificed for the sake of a parent's life.
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C2 For the happiness of one's child.
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C3 For the happiness of a loved one.
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C4 The same as 2, but caused by unjust laws.
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D1 Life and honor sacrificed for the life of a parent or loved one.
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D2 Modesty sacrificed for the life of a relative or a loved one.
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22. ALL SACRIFICED FOR A PASSION. Elements: The lover, the object of the
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fatal passion, and the person or thing sacrificed.
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A1 Religious vows of chastity broken for passion.
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A2 A vow of purity broken.
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A3 Respect for a priest destroyed.
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A4 Power ruined by a passion.
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A5 Ruin of mind, health, and life.
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A6 Passion gratified at the price of life.
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A7 Ruin of fortunes, lives, and honor.
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B Temptations (see 12) destroying the sense of duty, pity, etc.
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C1 Destruction of honor, fortune, and life by erotic vice.
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C2 The same effect produced by any other vice.
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23. NECESSITY OF SACRIFICING LOVED ONES. Elements: The hero, the beloved
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victim, and the necessity for the sacrifice.
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A1 Necessity for sacrificing a daughter in the public interest.
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A2 Duty of sacrificing her in fulfillment of a vow to God.
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B1 Duty of sacrificing, under the same circumstances, one's father.
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B3 Duty of sacrificing, under the same circumstances, one's husband.
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B4 Duty of sacrificing a son-in-law for the public good.
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B5 Same case under the sake of reputation.
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B6 Duty of contending with a brother-in-law for the public good.
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B7 Duty of contending with a friend.
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24. RIVALRY OF SUPERIOR AND INFERIOR. Elements: The superior rival, the
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inferior rival, and the object.
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A Masculine rivalries.
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A1 Of a mortal and immortal.
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A2 Of two divinities of unequal power.
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A3 Of a magician and an ordinary man.
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A4 Of conqueror and conquered.
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A5 Of victor and vanquished.
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A6 Of a master and a banished man.
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A7 Of usurper and subject.
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A8 Of Suzerian King and Vassal Kings.
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A9 Of a powerful person and upstart.
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A10 Of rich and poor.
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A11 Of an honored man and a suspected one.
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A12 Rivalry of two who are almost equal.
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A13 Rivalry of equals, one of whom in the past has been proved guilty of
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adultery.
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A14 Of a man who is loved and one who has not the right to love.
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A15 Of the two (or more) successive husbands of a divorcee.
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B Feminine rivalries.
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B1 Of a sorceress and an ordinary woman.
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B2 Of victor and prisoner.
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B3 Of a queen and slave.
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B4 Of lady and servant.
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B5 Of a lady and a woman of humbler position.
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B6 Of a lady and two women of humbler class.
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B7 Rivalry of two who are almost equals, complicated by the abandonment of
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one.
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B8 Rivalry between the memory or an ideal (that of a superior woman) and a
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vassal of her own.
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B9 Rivalry of mortal and immortal.
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C Double rivalry (A loves B, who loves C, who loves D).
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D Oriental rivalries (Hindu polygamy).
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D1 Rivalry of two immortals.
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D2 Of two mortals.
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D3 Of two lawful wives.
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25. ADULTERY. Elements: A deceived husband or wife and two adulterers.
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A A mistress betrayed:
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A1 For a young woman.
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A2 For a young wife.
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A3 For a girl.
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B A wife betrayed:
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B1 For a slave, who does not love in return.
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B2 For debauchery.
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B3 For a married woman.
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B4 With the intention of bigamy.
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B5 For a young girl, who does not love in return.
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B6 A wife envied by a young girl who is in love with her husband.
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B7 By a courtesan.
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B8 Rivalry between a lawful wife who is antipathetic and a mistress who is
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congenial.
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B9 Between a generous wife and an impassioned girl.
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C1 An antagonistic husband sacrificed for a congenial lover.
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C2 A husband, believed to be lost, forgotten for a rival.
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C3 A commonplace husband sacrificed for a sympathetic lover.
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C4 A good husband betrayed for an inferior rival.
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C5 For a grotesque rival.
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C6 For an odious rival.
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C7 For a commonplace rival, by a perverse wife.
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C8 For a less handsome, but useful rival (with comic false suspicions).
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D1 Vengeance of a deceived husband.
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D2 Jealousy sacrificed out of pity.
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E A husband persecuted by a rejected rival.
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26. CRIMES OF LOVE. Elements: The lover and the betrayed.
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A1 A mother in love with her son.
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A2 A daughter in love with her father.
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A3 Violation of a daughter by her father.
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B1 A woman enamored of her stepson.
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B2 A woman and her stepson enamored of each other.
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B3 A woman being the mistress, at the same time, of a father and son, both
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of whom accept the situation.
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C1 A man becomes the lover of his sister-in-law.
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C2 The man alone becomes enamored.
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C3 A brother and sister in love with each other.
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D1 A man enamored of another man, who yields.
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D2 A woman enamored of a bull.
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27. DISCOVERY OF THE DISHONOR OF A LOVED ONE. Elements: The discoverer and
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the guilty one.
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A1 Discovery of a mother's shame.
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A2 Discovery of a father's shame.
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A3 Discovery of a daughter's dishonor.
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B1 Discovery that one's wife has been violated before marriage... since the
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marriage.
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B2 That she previously committed a fault.
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B3 Discovery that one's wife has formerly been a prostitute.
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B4 Discovery of dishonor on the part of a lover.
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B5 Discovery that one's mistress, formerly a prostitute, has returned to
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her old life.
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B6 Discovery that one's lover is a scoundrel, or that one's mistress is a
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woman of bad character... The same discovery concerning a so-called king.
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B7 The same discovery concerning one's wife.
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C Discovery that one's son is an assassin.
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D1 Duty of punishing a son who is a traitor to country. A brother who is a
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traitor to his party.
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D2 Duty of punishing a son condemned under a law which the father has made.
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D3 Duty of punishing a son believed to be guilty.
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D4 Duty of sacrificing, to fulfill a vow of tyrannicide, a father until
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then unknown.
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D5 Duty of punishing a brother who is an assassin.
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D6 Duty of punishing one's mother to avenge one's father.
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28. OBSTACLES TO LOVE. Elements: Two lovers and an obstacle.
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A1 Marriage prevented by inequality of rank.
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A2 Inequality of fortune an impediment to marriage.
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B Marriage prevented by enemies and contingent obstacles.
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C1 Marriage forbidden on account of the young woman's previous betrothal to
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another.
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C2 The same case, complicated by an imaginary marriage of the beloved
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object.
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D1 A free union impeded by the opposition of relatives.
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D2 Family affection disturbed by the parents-in-law.
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E By the incompatibility of temper of the lovers.
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F Love
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29. AN ENEMY LOVED. Elements: The beloved enemy, the lover, and the hater.
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A The loved one hated by the kinsman of the lover.
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A1 The lover pursued by the brothers of his beloved.
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A2 The lover hated by the family of his beloved.
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A3 The lover is the son of a man hated by the kinsmen of his beloved.
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A4 The beloved is an enemy of the party of the woman who loves him.
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B1 The lover is the slayer of the father of his beloved.
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B2 The beloved is the slayer of the father of the beloved.
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B3 The beloved is the slayer of the brother of her lover.
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B4 The beloved is the slayer of the husband of the woman who loves him, but
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who has previously sworn to avenge that husband.
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B5 The same case, except that a lover, instead of a husband, has been
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slain.
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B6 The beloved is the slayer of a kinsman of the woman who loves him.
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B7 The beloved is the daughter of the slayer of her lover's father.
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30. AMBITION. Elements: An ambitious person, a thing coveted, and an
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adversary.
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A1 Ambition watched and guarded against by a kinsman or patriot friend or
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by a brother.
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A2 By a relative or person under obligation.
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A3 By partisans.
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B Rebellious ambition (akin to #8).
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C1 Ambition and covetousness heaping crime upon crime.
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C2 Parricidal ambition.
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31. CONFLICT WITH A GOD. Elements: A mortal and an immortal.
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A1 Struggle against a deity
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A2 Strife with the believers in a god.
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B1 Controversy with a deity.
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B2 Punishment for contempt of a god.
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B3 Punishment for pride before a god.
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B4 Presumptuous rivalry with a god.
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B5 Imprudent rivalry with a deity.
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32. MISTAKEN JEALOUSY. Elements: The jealous one, the object of whose
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possession he is jealous, the supposed accomplice, and the cause or the author
|
|
of the mistake.
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A1 The mistake originates in the suspicious mind of the jealous one.
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A2 Mistaken jealousy aroused by a fatal chance.
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A3 Mistaken jealousy of a love which is purely platonic.
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A4 Baseless jealousy aroused by malicious rumors.
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B1 Jealousy suggested by a traitor who is moved by hatred.
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B2 The same case, in which the traitor is moved by self-interest.
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B3 The same case, in which the traitor is moved by jealousy and self-
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interest.
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C1 Reciprocal jealousy suggested to husband and wife by a rival.
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C2 Jealousy suggested to the husband by a woman who is in love with him.
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C3 Jealousy suggested to the wife by a second rival.
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C4 Jealousy suggested to a happy lover by a deceived husband.
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33. ERRONEOUS JUDGEMENT. Elements: The mistaken one, the victim of the
|
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mistake, the cause or author of the mistake, and the guilty person.
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A1 False suspicion where faith is necessary.
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A2 False suspicion (in which the jealousy is not without reason) of a
|
|
mistress.
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A3 False suspicions aroused by a misunderstood attitude of a loved one.
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A4 By indifference.
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B1 False suspicions drawn upon oneself to save a friend.
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B2 They fall upon the innocent husband of the guilty one.
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B3 The same case as B2, but in which the innocent had a guilty intention or
|
|
in which the innocent believes himself guilty.
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B4 A witness to a crime, in the interest of a loved one, lets accusation
|
|
fall upon the innocent.
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|
C1 The accusation is allowed to fall upon an enemy.
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C2 The error is provoked by an enemy.
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C3 The mistake is directed against the victim by her brother.
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D1 False suspicion thrown by the real culprit upon one of his enemies.
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D2 Thrown by the real culprit upon the second victim against whom he has
|
|
plotted from the beginning.
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D3 False suspicion thrown upon a rival.
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D4 Thrown upon one innocent, because he has refused to be an accomplice.
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D5 Thrown by a deserted mistress upon a lover who left her because he would
|
|
not deceive her husband.
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|
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D6 Struggle to rehabilitate oneself and to avenge a judicial error
|
|
purposely caused.
|
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34. REMORSE. Elements: The culprit, the victim or the sin, and the
|
|
interrogator.
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|
|
|
A1 Remorse for an unknown crime.
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A2 Remorse for parricide.
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A3 Remorse for an assassination... for a judicial murder.
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A4 Remorse for the murder of husband or wife.
|
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B1 Remorse for a fault of love.
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B2 Remorse for adultery.
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35. RECOVERY OF A LOST ONE. Elements: The seeker and the one found.
|
|
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|
36. LOSS OF LOVED ONES. Elements: A kinsman slain, a kinsman spectator, and
|
|
an executioner.
|
|
|
|
A1 Witnessing the slaying of kinsmen, while powerless to prevent it.
|
|
|
|
A2 Helping to bring misfortune upon one's people through professional
|
|
secrecy.
|
|
|
|
B Divining the death of a loved one.
|
|
|
|
C Learning of the death of a kinsman or ally.
|
|
|
|
D Relapse in primitive baseness, through despair on learning of the death
|
|
of a loved one.
|
|
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|
37. MISTAKEN IDENTITY.
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|
|
A Thinking someone is rich when he's poor.
|
|
|
|
B The wrong man caught in the web of fear.
|
|
|
|
C Schizophrenia.
|
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|
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|
Another file downloaded from: NIRVANAnet(tm)
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Rat Head 415-524-3649
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Cheez Whiz 408-363-9766
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Reality Check 415-474-2602
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