Yeats poem Jiang uses to show fair/foul, body/spirit reversals as Frankist in mood.
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Crazy Jane Talks with a Bishop
Yeats poem Jiang uses to show fair/foul, body/spirit reversals as Frankist in mood.
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Key Notes
Timestamped Evidence
"...the Golden Dawn. Okay? All right. So it's called Crazy Jane Talks with a Bishop. Okay? So Emma, can you read please? It's very..."
"I met the bishop on the road and much said that he was a high religious authority."
"Those breasts are flat and fallen now. Those veins must soon be dry. Live in a heavenly mansion not in some foul stye."
"Okay. So you're fallen, right? So you've seen a lot in life. You've lived a terrible life. But don't worry. God is forgiving. If..."
"Fair and foul are near of kin. And fair needs foul, I cried. My friends are gone, but that's a truth. Nor grave nor..."
"You cannot have sin, sorry, you cannot have good about evil. You cannot have ugliness, you cannot have beauty about ugliness. Okay? So, and..."
Relevant Lectures And Readings
A source-grounded reading of Jiang’s lecture on Jewish history, Sabbatai Zevi, and Jacob Frank: Jerusalem begins as an imperial hinge, exile becomes a crisis of faith, and Frankism turns sin, story, money, secrecy, and...
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