Answer is A. Romeo in the play has a very young person's idea of love. Where the person they like is their world and they absolutely can't do anything without that person. If they aren't with them, they will never be happy. This is one of the ideas of Romeo and Juliet that love blinds us. They were so infatuated with each other that they killed themselves in the end. B is wrong. He only cared about Juliet. C is wrong. In this part he is not angry. D is wrong. He is not making a decision currently
<u>Answer:</u>
<em>"How scaped am I killing when I crossed you so? / O insupportable and touching loss!"
</em>
<em>"My heart is thirsty for that noble pledge. / Fill, Lucius, till the wine o', Roswell the cup."
</em>
<u>Explanation:</u>
The tribunes of Marallus and Flavius led to the disruption of a gathering of the Roman citizens who wanted to celebrate the triumph of Caesar after he returned safely from the war. The victory was to marl the free game that Mark had taken part in. This made the arena stop Caesar, and he was warned that he should be informed about the Ides. Therefore Brutus and Cacius suspected the reactions of Caesar because of the public power he had held. And because of this, they had a fear that he will not be an emperor.
If the options are: <span>A. excited, B. ironic, C. indignant, and D. playful, the correct answer is C. indignant.
The narrator is very disappointed with </span><span>Stephen Mackaye. There is a stark contrast between what he used to feel for him and what he feels now. He used to trust, love, and respect him, and now he loathes him. The feeling of indignance spreads from Stephen to all people, as the narrator says he would never trust people again.</span>
<span>If you had attached some options to choose I would definitely have helped you and give the correct answer. Even though this excerpt looks like a paragraph 16 in the research paper but I am pretty sure that the right answer is page 16 of a book by author Ritter. Because <span>the number at the end always indicates a page number on which the quote can be found. Do hope you still need the answer because this one is really helpful.</span></span>
The meaning of the phrase "thou art wedded to calamity” is that You often have disaster around you.
This dialogue has been said by Friar Lawrence to Romeo in the play “Romeo and Juliet.” sufferings have been personified as a human being with whom Romeo has completed the steps of marriage. It was after meeting and falling in love with Juliet that Romeo's life got surrounded by difficulties. A metaphor has been used in the line which compares Juliet with 'calamity.'