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Onschuld - Innocence Onschuldig - Innocent
Innocence : baree'e written as : بريء
maybe you mean euripides - say, you-rip-ee-dees
I'm pretty sure it came from Medea.
i would say so
l'innocence perdue
Innocentia pulchra.
no becase he is like a king and if they did say in what Hitler did he beliived that they where trying to over power him and the punshiment...DEATH
The earliest tragedies, that is to say, tragic plays, were written in Ancient Greece by such playwrights as Aeschylus, Sophocles and Euripides
It is difficult to say for sure whether Euripides believed in the Greek Gods or not. He lived in Athens through 406 b.c. and wrote many plays. His plays are about the affairs of the Gods, so Euripides most likely did believe in their existence. Alcestis features Apollo, Herakles, and Thanatos. In Trojan Women, Poseidon and Athene are main characters. And the Bacchae revolves around Dionysus' punishment of King Pentheus of Thebes and his mother for failing to worship him. With these examples, it's easy to assume that Euripides did, indeed, believe in the Greek Gods.
William Blake's poem "The Sick Rose" explores themes of innocence, experience, and the destructive power of jealousy or desire. The rose symbolizes purity and beauty while the worm represents corruption or decay. The poem warns of the dangers of allowing negative emotions to take root and destroy that which is pure and good.
It means he is head over heels in love with you and in his weakness he will do anything.