English, asked by brittanyspears5090, 11 months ago

When adam delved and eve span who was then the gentleman? Meaning?

Answers

Answered by VEDATsayer
5

Answer:

It is a poetic way of replacing the word work in a gender-specific way. To wit:

When the quotation says that Adam delved, it is saying that he delved into the soil of the earth he farmed; this illuminates the connection with the primary meaning of delve. In other words, it is another way to say that he tilled the soil, an old male-specific metaphor for general work in English.

When it says that Eve span, it is similarly referring to a female-specific metaphor for work; not so long ago, women were largely responsible for tailoring and mending the clothing of their household, and even today hobbies like crocheting and knitting are strongly associated with the feminine sex. Weaving cloth in those days would have required a distaff and a spindle; a spindle is a weighted object that spins as it releases cloth to the loom, which explains the use of the participle span.

Though you didn't ask about it in your question, gentlemen had less of a vague meaning than today, where it can be applied to just about anybody, rich or poor; back then, in John Ball's time, to have been called a gentleman would have been to be a man of means, of good family and distinction, and it would connote more of a class divide than we observe with the word today. Indeed, gentlemen has a shared etymological root with the word gentry, which as you'll note still retains that distinction for scholarly use.

So in other words, the quotation can be crudely paraphrased thus:

Back when our righteous forefathers worked, who among them would have been better than the other, who would have observed any class distinctions?

That massage would have soundly resonated with the rebels of the Peasant Revolt John Ball was preaching to.

Answered by harshitha12385
1

Answer:

hey mate ❤

Explanation:

here is your answer

Similar questions