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- Newsgroups: alt.usage.english
- Path: sparky!uunet!mcsun!sunic!psinntp!psinntp!scylla!harper
- From: harper@oracorp.com (Douglas Harper)
- Subject: Shrift (was Re: floating and sinking)
- Message-ID: <1992Nov11.030402.10762@oracorp.com>
- Organization: ORA Corporation, Ithaca, New York
- References: <1992Nov8.2040.215@ALMAC> <BxGMrt.9uL@cck.coventry.ac.uk> <BxGMzq.Ct8@cck.coventry.ac.uk>
- Distribution: alt
- Date: Wed, 11 Nov 1992 03:04:02 GMT
- Lines: 16
-
- In article <BxGMzq.Ct8@cck.coventry.ac.uk> idx009@cck.coventry.ac.uk (the Crisco Kid) writes:
- >Sorry to folloup to my own followup, but I missed a small element in the
- >chain of reasoning: it was considered necessary before death to make a
- >final confession of one's sins, and to be absolved (shriven) of them, thus
- >dying in a state of grace, if one were to have a hope of gaining Heaven.
- >Dying unshriven, without the last sacraments, was greatly feared.
-
- There's a good illustration of this in Act V Scene II of _Hamlet_.
- Hamlet tells Horatio how he turned the tables on Rosencrantz and
- Guildenstern, setting them up for "sudden death" in England, "Not
- shriving-time allow'd".
-
- Don't mess with broody intellectuals, I'd say.
-
- --
- Douglas Harper | harper@oracorp.com | +1 (607) 277-2020
-