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For one, many lawbreakers could not get jobs elsewhere. Also they could go out to a colony

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What was Jacque Cartiers most important accomplishments?

Finding land


Why were most of Jacques Cartier's crew pardoned lawbreakers?

for one, many lawbreakers could not get jobs elsewhere. Also they could go out to a colony and no one would care about there past. Just whether of not they were a capable worker.


What is the most popular fiction book?

Probably the Redwall Series, by Brian Jaques.


What are the most important things that happened in Jacques cartiers voyage in 1734?

the rudder of the caravel pinta became loose


What is the most popular animal fiction book?

Probably the Redwall Series, by Brian Jaques.


Who was the most recent cricketer to score 10 000 test runs?

Jaques Kallis


Who has scored most runs in ODI for South Africa?

jaques kallis has scored most runs in odi for south affrica


What is jaques cartier Favourite Music?

muic during the 1500s would most likely be his favorite music, look it up!


Why does Jacques narrate the seven ages in As You Like It?

Jaques does not really "narrate" the speech; nobody comes up to him and says, "Hey Jaques, can you do that seven ages speech?" It flows from a discussion in the forest and from Jaques's own melancholy nature. Orlando has arrived at the forest camp and has found to his surprise that Duke Senior is happy to offer him food and Orlando does not have to rob him of it. Orlando goes off to find his aged servant Adam and bring him so he can eat. The Duke says "Thou seest we are not all alone unhappy: this wide and universal theatre presents more woeful pageants than the scene wherein we play in." The Duke says to Jaques "See? There are some worse off than we are". But Jaques ignores this and instead riffs on the metaphor of "the theatre of life" which the Duke suggests, repeating and amplifying the idea that we are only playing parts in life like actors. There is a practical reason why Shakespeare had Jaques go on at such length. Orlando has just left to find and bring back Adam. It would have looked silly to have him return immediately after leaving. The speech is therefore a time-filler, so that we know that it took Orlando some time to find Adam and return to the camp. Some of Shakespeare's most eloquent speeches have just such a prosaic purpose.


Why can't people and cops just get along?

Most people don't hate cops. Lawbreakers hate cops and enemies of peaceful coexistence hate cops, but unfortunately they are a loud minority. Their lunacy is fun sensational media to get viewers to watch their station or to read their editorials. Outrage is all the rage it seems these days.


What is Jacques Brel most well-known for?

Jaques Brel is know for being a singer who wrote songs as well as being an actor. He was born in Belgum and wrote in French. His music influenced many people including David Bowie and Leonard Cohen.


What emotion was Jacques trying to elicit when he spoke the all the worlds a stage?

The tone of Jaques's speech changes a couple of times. Often it is painted with a wash of wistful melancholy, but this is not the most effective way to deliver it. Jaques is trying to make an argument against the Duke's point that some people (i.e. Orlando and Adam) are worse off than Jaques is and he ought to be thankful for it. No, says Jaques, riffing of the Duke's description of the world as a "wide and universal theatre", every person plays the same parts, the same seven parts, so nobody is better or worse off than anyone else. Now, this is obviously silly, but Jaques keeps us going by making his descriptions of the different types as funny and sarcastic as he can. So, with the words "All the world's a stage and all the men and women merely players." he starts off the premise of his argument which he will continue until he comes to the description of the seven ages. With the words "First, the infant", he will start to be funny, and will get funnier and funnier as he goes along, until with the lean and slipper'd Pantaloon he will have his audience gasping with laughter at how his voice "pipes and whistles". And then, abruptly, the laughter stops. The last stage of all is not funny at all, and we can see that this man who is "sans everything" will soon be "sans breath", and will die. And here Jaques has surprisingly made his point: nobody is any better off than anyone else because we are all going to die. We are all in the same boat. This abrupt change brings a more profound sense of melancholy at our common doom than being wistful through the whole speech would be. And that's what Jaques wants.