The plot is rather simple, two people who are married to other people fall in love with each other and want to be together but can't because of their respective marriages. The entire play is just one part, or one act, and it's a comical version of the commonly understood Arthurian characters and cliches.
Answer:
In this excerpt from Act V, Scene V, of "The Tragedy of Julius Caesar", by William Shakespeare, and the background information on the allusion it contains, affect the reader's understanding because <u>It shows that Brutus is afraid he will be tortured if he is still alive when his enemies arrive.</u>
Explanation:
Brutus is an honorable man, who was convinced by the other conspirators to kill Julius Caesar. He did it for Rome's sake, believing he was saving the future of Rome. He knows that his soldiers have been defeated, and he has seen Caesar's ghost. He wants to die honorably and knows that if his enemies arrive before he is dead they will torture him. So he asks Strato to hold his sword, and he runs on it.
Answer:
The parallel structure emphasizes the idea that the creative process is easily and often interrupted by life’s events and obligations.
Explanation:
This is true going by the passage which tries to show that, the process though creative in nature tends to be disrupted by life's events which has never been planned for.
The speaker in “Kubla Khan” describes a <span>vision he has had that describes </span><span>the “stately pleasure-dome” built in Xanadu.</span>
I think it is D the uncertainty of life