One thing I learned from this exercise is that it is not necessarily that it is an article because the article exists in the form of a publication. It is a good item. The dictionary through the two articles in my hand is ridiculous and fundamental after a person attacks through technical terms, absolutely absurd and unsupported. I was disappointed, I went to search again, Clara Tuyt proposed "closed closet: enlightening pornography, confession state, persecution and gays of homosexuals", this article I wrote
M · G · Lewis wrote "The Monk" at the age of 21 in 1795. It took ten weeks to complete the novel and publish it in 1796. Lewis wrote this book after reading Anrad Cliff's 'Mysterious Odoff'. Two different stories are composed of monks. In one episode, two lovers, Agnes and Raymond are separated from their parents by the Catholic Church. Agnes was pregnant and sent to the monaster where she was trapped in the wall and tortured. She gave birth to a child, and she died in front of her. In another conspiracy, the monk Ambrosio destroyed his oath through a plot of evil Matilda. Through a series of complex intrigue twists and rotations, Ambrosio murdered the woman and raped another woman. He finally entered the Inquisition Office and sold his soul to Satan. He died of a bad long-term death. Critics at the time thought that this novel is obscene and devout. But this novel is very popular
Matthew Lewis talks about the monastery's debuture, entitled "Monk" (1796), which provided the first continental novel following the Gothic novel, the story of Dark Magic and the Devil. Rui's novel can be thought of as imitating a new genre, but since this type was established in Walpole's Otranto, self-imitation has always been an element of Gothic. Lewis has shocked several readers about the fallen monks, sadistic judges, nuns of the audiences, and his Catholic church, but monks are important in this kind of development.
049883 THE MONK Lewis, Matthew G. When first published in 1796, The Monk shocked and shocked the readers with graphic depictions of desire, sin and violence. This is a true classic of Gothic novels, leaving marks that will not disappear in British literature, influencing prominent writers such as Byron, Scott, Pau, Flow Veil, Hawthorn, Emily Blone etc. 445 pgs. • 1993 This 16th century novel is a mixture of satire, allegory, and his conservative rogue story, and major and minor. Soul, god, semi-god, demon, demon, monster, and fairies meet. 305 pgs. • 1998