Sunday, May 26, 2019
Generous Generosity
Generous is an adjective frequently adopted by poets generosity is a virtue greatly valued by nobilities open-handed generosity is a depiction historically inherited by generations. I am always wondering that how does generosity develop its personal charisma to draw out so much attention? Is it possible to decode its mystery by tracing the origin of unstinting?Browsing through books, I discovered that almost clues keep emerging. From a historic perspective, tracing words development back in time shows that in many cases what are now rive lexical items were formerly identical words. The deep prehistory of language has nurtured little word-seeds that over the millennia have pro livelihoodrated into widely differentiated families of vocabulary. Generous is a word of no exception.Originally, it was a derivative of genus in the sense birth, stock, race, and harks back semantically to its ultimate source in the Indo-European base gen denoting produce. Its Germanic offshoots include ki n, kind, and likely king, but for sheer numbers it is the Latin descendant genus race, type. It probably entered the language in the 16th century coming via Old French genereux from Latin generosus, which originally meant of noble birth (a sense which survived in English into the late 17th century Richard Knolles, for instance, in his General history of the Turks 1603, wrote of many knights of lavish blood line).Years of evolution witness the moderate changes in the meaning of generous, and its semantic progression from nobly born through noble-minded, magnanimous to liberal in large impresses me while reading classics. In the field of literature, generous enjoys a great rate of exposure. Let al wizard other authors, solely William Shakespeare used it for at to the lowest degree dozen times. Its first appearance was in Loves Labours Lost, a work of Shakespeares early comedy.For instance, in scene one the fifth Acta humorous dialogue conducted between the egg-headed Holofernes and Armado Armado Sir, it is the Kings most sweet pleasure and affection to congratulate the Princess at her pavilion, in the posteriors of this day which the rude multitude call the afternoon. Holofernes The posterior of the day, most generous sir, is liable, congruent, and measurable, for the afternoon. The word is well culld, chose, sweet, and apt, I do assure you, sir, I do assure. Under this circumstance, generous is an expression of nobility. As for a noble man, soul of innate generosity, every task is gracious and magnificent as well as every utterance.However, when this word was spoken by the bookish Hologernes, it sounded like a cheap flattery rather than a sincere approbation. In Loves Labours Lost, generous was endowed with a new meaning, namely, kind giving. In scene two the fifth Act, Holofernes shouted that This is not generous, not gentle, not humble when he was roughly treated by courtiers. The above context reflects that generous stresses warm hearted readiness to g ive and demonstrates kindness to others in want of helps. done Shakespeares interpretation, a generous sir can be defined as a well born person characterized by a noble enliven generosity means the quality of being liberal and magnanimous.In addition, according to Alexander Pope 1, many people are capable of doing a wise thing, much a cunning thing, but very few a generous thing. What Pope intended to convey was that doing generous things demands lofty characters and unconditional dedication. Hovering in my mind, generous incorporates kind, wise and noble. Sometimes, the generous giving of ourselves can produce the generous harvest. Sometimes, barely detectable as it is, generosity can change someone elses life forever. Generous generosity is the most enchanting expression in English language, and the greatest wisdom cherished by civilized society, which urges people to do the generous deed, and to carry on the virtue of generosity.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment