I'm trying to interpret these passages, can someone help me?
"The reason of the unreasonableness which against my reason is wrought, doth so weaken my reason, as with all reason I do justly complain of your beauty."
"The high heavens, which with your divinity doth fortify you divinely with the stars, and make you deserveress of the deserts that your greatness deserves."
I know there is deeper meaning here, I just can't quite grasp it.
Not even Aristotle could figure out what those meant, even if he were brought back to life for that sole purpose.
>>9012867
I can feel my brain drying out as we speak. Best give whatever horrible books you're reading a rest.
>>9012867
>I know there is deeper meaning here
I don't think there is
It's pretty obvious that the meaning in those two passages is that Quixote went "insane" because he spent all his time reading jibberish like that, as the book explicitly states.
1)She's so pretty I can't into thinking. 'reason of the unreasonableness', where unreasonableness refers to the subject 'beauty'. 'justly complain' as he's stating it obvious. 'which against my reason is wrought' referring to 'beauty' through 'unreasonableness'. Not hard.
2)Copies above, this time he's saying she's pretty. 'divinity doth fortify you divinely' refers to 'your'. The 'deserts' got me lost though, but since it's don quixote it's probably supposed to be ridiculous anyways.
>>9013399
joke
*wooooooosh*
your head