This particular scene, in which Brutus enters in his orchard, depicts the way Brutus speaks to the audience to give us access to his thoughts. Caesar is the maximum authority in Rome but the fact that Brutus thinks that "Th'abuse of greatness is when it disjoins Remorse from power" reflects that even a ruler, a good individual can be corrupted by ambition, as Brutus later suggests, and cause suffering to his people. The right option is the third one. The reference to cold-blooded reptiles implies great danger even on a bright day.
Answer and Explanation:
In Shakespeare's "A Midsummer Night's Dream", Oberon is the king of the fairies. His wife is Titania, queen of the fairies. <u>Oberon wants to bless Theseus' house to bring luck. Theseus will marry Hippolyta, and Oberon wants to make sure they will be happy and that their future babies will be beautiful and fortunate. In the end, he blesses other couples in the play as well, and promises they will all stay in love and be happy.</u>
This question is incomplete, here´s the complete question.
Read The Pied Piper of Hamelin
, by Robert Browning (1888)
What does the section from the lone surviving child’s perspective reveal about the Piper’s magic?
Answer: The Piper’s music enchanted them whit promises of a magical land.
Explanation:
The only surviving child from the Pipers music, a limping boy who didn´t make it on time to follow the rest of the children, explains that the magical music promised to lead them into a magical land full of amazing treats, such as plenty fruit-trees, beautiful flowers, bees that don´t sting, and winged horses.
<u>Compare and contrast W. H. Auden's "Musée des Beaux Arts" and William Carlos Williams's "Landscape with the Fall of Icarus." </u>
<u>What similarities and differences do you see in the way the poets present ideas to the reader?</u>
The most important similarity between W.H. Auden and William Carlos Williams' poems is that both describe Pieter Brueghel's painting <em>Landscape With The Fall of Icarus</em>. Both poets illustrate the scene and all its surroundings with detail. Both poets exemplify with imagery the painting's scene and what it depicts.
<u>Nevertheless, the poets do differ in other elements:</u>
- Auden presents his poem using free verse and divides it into two long stanzas without any rhyme. Although William Carlos Williams doesn't use rhyme either, he keeps a more traditional construction by dividing the poem into six stanzas with three lines in each.
- Auden reflects on suffering and the burden of routine depicted in the painting with more delicate and meditative observations. He mentions Icarus in the second stanza and contemplates his psyche in a deeper way. Williams, on the other hand, presents his ideas in a concise manner. He states the reader the facts and describes the painting with concrete examples. He mentions Icarus since the first stanza but doesn't concentrate on what he might have felt or what others might be feeling in that precise moment.
- Auden sensed the painting and tells the reader his experience when he saw it. Williams is an observer. He tells the reader a descriptive summary of what he saw without delving into his inner experience and thoughts.