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The children must hide their love from their families. In the end, the children die as a result of their love. The love between the children is forbidden.
In "Pyramus and Thisbe" the parents simply do not want their children falling in love with each other. We do not know the reason for this and are not told of any feud or conflict. This means that any option that has to do with a conflict between the families should not be chose. Since the children have to hide their love from the families in both pieces of literature, it is safe to say that love between them is forbidden. In the end, Pyramus and Thisbe, Romeo and Juliet die because of their love for each other.
Its D the comparison or reference to a different story or illustration is by definition a illusion
The event that most clearly contributes to the monster's hatred of humans is option D: Frankentein's abandonment of his creation immediately after it receives life.
The monster tells it's story to his creator, Victor Frankenstein, when they meet on a hill. Frankenstein is surprised to see how articulated the creature is, and it tells how he was attacked every time he found humans. Then he narrates how he hid himself in a warehouse of firewood attached to a cottage, from where he observes the life of a family, until the day they discover the monster he is. From this point, the creature decides to get revenge from his creator.