Pekuah

E932774

Pekuah is a loyal and intelligent attendant to Princess Nekayah in Samuel Johnson’s philosophical novel "Rasselas, Prince of Abyssinia," whose abduction and experiences highlight themes of virtue, suffering, and resilience.

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Label Occurrences
Pekuah canonical 1

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Statements (43)

Predicate Object
instanceOf female character
fictional character
literary character
abductedBy Arab robbers
appearsIn Rasselas, Prince of Abyssinia NERFINISHED
associatedWithCharacter Imlac NERFINISHED
Princess Nekayah NERFINISHED
Rasselas NERFINISHED
associatedWithLocation Abyssinia NERFINISHED
Happy Valley NERFINISHED
authorNationality British (via creator Samuel Johnson)
centralThemeAssociation Providence NERFINISHED
resilience
suffering
theodicy
virtue
characterTrait intelligent
loyal
pious
resilient
virtuous
createdBy Samuel Johnson NERFINISHED
experiences captivity
eventual deliverance
fear
firstAppearance Rasselas, Prince of Abyssinia NERFINISHED
genreOfWork philosophical novel
languageOfWork English
literaryMovement Enlightenment literature NERFINISHED
literaryPeriod 18th-century English literature
loyalTo Princess Nekayah NERFINISHED
medium prose fiction
moralSignificance embodiment of constancy in adversity
example of rational piety
narrativeFunction illustrates the limits of human control over events
provides material for philosophical reflection on evil and suffering
tests the faith and patience of the main party
occupation attendant
roleInPlot attendant to Princess Nekayah
example of steadfast virtue under suffering
victim of abduction
serves Princess Nekayah NERFINISHED
workPublicationYear 1759

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Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.