What we found on the web about Feste
Feste is a jester in the Shakespeare comedy Twelfth Night or: What You Will. He is attached to the household of the Countess Olivia. Apparently he has been there for quite a while ...
"A Mighty Fortress Is Our God" (German, Ein' feste Burg ist unser Gott) is the best known of Martin Luther 's hymns. Luther wrote the words and composed the melody sometime between ...
Build / Generate / Create your own lolcats and lol whatever with the official I Can Has Cheezburger? Factory. You can send to your friends and submit them to ICHC with a click of a ...
Well - true that it's not as big as it used to be, but I think that live theater will never truly die. I mean, it's been around for thousands of years and it's lasted this long
very nice emotion you put in the song (I must admit that I played this song like a robot, especially the tremolo part). Also your technique is awesome.
Definition of ein' feste Burg ist unser Gott from the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary with audio pronunciations, thesaurus, Word of the Day, and word games.
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In the first excerpt, Alan Downer examines Feste's role as the fool in Twelfth Night , which allows Feste to speak freely and peel away the pretenses of the other characters.
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Feste is a jester in the Shakespeare comedy Twelfth Night or: What You Will. He is attached to the household of the Countess Olivia. Apparently he has been there for quite a while, as he was a "fool that the Lady Olivia's father took much delight in" (2.4). Although Olivia's father just died within the last year, it is possible that Feste approaches or has reached middle age, though he still has the wit to carry off good fooling as he needs to, and the voice to sing lustily or plangently as the occasion demands. Not only that, he seems to leave Olivia's house and return at his pleasure, rather too freely for a servant. (At the very least he is doing some free-lance entertaining over at the house of Duke Orsino (2.4).) His peripatetic habits get him into trouble with Lady Olivia: when we first see him (1.5), he must talk his way out of being turned out — a grim fate in those days — for being absent, as it were, without leave. He succeeds, and once back in his lady's good graces, he weaves in and out of the action with the sort of impunity that was reserved for a person nobody took seriously. He is referred to by name only once during the play, in answer to an inquiry by Orsino of who sang a song that he heard the previous evening. Curio responds "Feste, the jester, my lord; a fool that the lady Olivia's father took much delight in. He is about the house" (2.4). Throughout the rest of the play, he is addressed only as "Fool".

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