Answer:
C). Beckett begins with the idea of endings.
Explanation:
'Endgame' by Samuel Beckett works upon the existentialist philosophy and belongs to the 'theater of absurd.' It is often considered as the follow up of Beckett's classic work 'Waiting for Godot.'
As per the question, <u>the play authorizes the idea of circularity as the play begins and ends on the same note i.e. 'intertwining of beginning and end</u>.' It is based upon the key idea of 'hopelessness' and the characters are endlessly waiting for 'nothing' but death. Clove internally feels 'he need to live' and plans of leaving but could not and goes back to the same situation(reflects absurdity and nothingness). Thus, the entire play moves around this very idea and hence, <u>option C</u> is the correct answer.
The event that most directly caused <span>the council to order the closure of all theaters in London was <span>Jonson and Nashe writing The Isle of Dogs.
</span>This is what the excerpt of the time says:
</span><span><em>The play for which he is arrested, The Isle of Dogs, coauthored with Thomas Nashe, is so slanderous and offensive that the privy council orders the closure not just of the play but of every theater in London.</em></span><span>
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Gregor Samsa, turns into a giant insect. He clings to the framed photograph of the woman in fur when his sister and mother start removing furniture from his room. This action symbolizes the emotional comfort that his possessions represent in his former life as human. He was unable to relinquish his humanity which led him to cling to the picture.
<em>The pun in Hamlet's statement "This man shall set me </em><em>packing</em><em>" is '</em><em>packing</em><em>'. '</em><em>Packing</em><em>' can mean go away, and </em><em>Hamlet </em><em>is referring to the fact that he has to flee because he killed a man. </em>
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<em>I hope this helps! Can I have Brainliest, please? :)</em>
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Answer:
C
Explanation: It shows that he believes it, and C is the only other one that shows a good reason for that.