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The Princess of Cleves - 3

" Well, sir," replied she, kneeling down, I'll make a confession that was never done to her husband, but the innocence of my conduct and my feelings gives me the strength ... "

pressed with questions by her husband, in a recent decision by the advice of his mother before it disappears, and although all ignorant of the presence of the Duke of Nemours hidden nearby, the Princess of Cleves is going to tell her husband that she loves another and that it should therefore remain excluded from court order not to succumb to passion.

so doing, she makes her husband jealous and terribly unfortunate, however, prohibiting him from power blame, since she does not want to yield to his feelings, even trying by all means to get rid of it. Her lover
* meanwhile, will see his hopes fulfilled in this confession and will continue to nurture new that would finally, to take in the beautiful his arms.

We will stick there for what is the progress of history to question a little confession.
So?
Honesty, stupidity, candor, lack of reserve, naive?

Anyway, the choice of the princess was that of truth.
And if the rest of the story shows us that this confession was a source of great pain for some as for others it is useful to remind ourselves that the Prince questioned his wife and insisted that the Duke had not much to be hidden in the roof.
This decision of the princess, this young woman embarked on a passionate affair, a little still single since the death of his mother, dropped into a courtyard where lying is acceptable, it will choose the franchise and say yes to this question is whether "when you hear something that can like a call, we are required to be kept by him . "

** What an wit!
I think that even the honesty we can add courage, for simplicity, again borrow a few words to Lyotard: "The naivete is the explosion of righteousness originally natural to humanity against the become an art of feigning Another kind . "
** One thing sure, silly, it is not.

* Amant also meant the word in the sixteenth century, platonic relationship between two people who loved each other.
Jean ** Francois Lyotard's "Critique of judging"

Edith.

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