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Registered User
Shylocke and his faith
Hi.
Shylock says: "This Iacob from our holy Abram was .... " and "O Father Abram, what these Christians are..." So he twice uses the name "Abram".
Why is this? Surely a devout Jew (which he seems to be) would know perfectly well that Abram was not the "father" of the Jewish nation until his name was changed to Abraham.
regards
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Registered User
Regarding the use of Abram rather than Abraham; since Shylock is speaking in verse, I believe Shakespeare uses "Abram" to limit the number of syllables and so maintain a pentameter line, i.e., "Abraham" has two more syllables than "Abram" and would disrupt the metre. Second, I doubt Shakespeare felt an obligation to be biblically accurate in the way Shylock uses language.
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