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  1. Study with Quizlet and memorise flashcards containing terms like 'Poor simple isabel', 'With every morn their love grew tenderer with every eve deeper and tenderer still', ' her full shape' (beginning) 'seldom felt she any hunger pain' (end) and others.

  2. Isabella of France (1 October 1348 – 11 September 1372) was a French princess and member of the House of Valois, as well as the wife of Gian Galeazzo Visconti, who after her death became Duke of Milan.

  3. Feb 27, 2015 · Isabella was the youngest daughter, and co-heiress, of William, 2nd Earl of Gloucester and his wife, Hawise, daughter of Robert de Beaumont, 2nd Earl of Leicester; Isabella was therefore a great-granddaughter of Isabel de Vermandois.

  4. Gothic, dark, tragic, brothers are the only unambiguous villains. "Forest dim / bury him". Highlights tragedy, gothic element. "Ah! what if I should lose thee, when so fain I a to stifle all the heavy sorrow". Procrastination is Lorenzo's fatal flaw, proleptic to actual loss. "There was Lorenzo slain and buried in".

  5. stanza 10. juxtaposing ideas of a zephyr (soft gentle breeze) blowing apart (quite vicious/strong) two roses; delicacy of their love "pleasant veil" [of the stars] stanza 11. nature reflects the beauty and tenderness of their love; natural imagery/allusions suggests purity of their love

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  6. Aug 15, 2020 · King John One of the most intriguing relationships of the Magna Carta story is that between Isabella of Gloucester and Isabelle d'Angoulême, the two wives of King John. Isabella of Gloucester is a unique individual in the story of Magna Carta.

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  8. Isabella of France was a French princess and member of the House of Valois, as well as the wife of Gian Galeazzo Visconti, who after her death became Duke of Milan.

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