Answer:
what am I supposed answer
Explanation:
C. <span>True love is worth overcoming obstacles to attain.
This theme can be summed up in Lysander's line in Act 1 Scene 1: "</span><span>The course of true love never did run smooth". This quote means the same as the theme, the path of true love usually has a lot of obstacles. The other couples in the play face obstacles too and have to get over their fights and disagreements in order to get to the happy ending. </span>
Answer:
E. Drunken.
Explanation:
Frank McCourt's 1996 memoir "Angela's Ashes," tells the story of his own childhood, involving his father Malachy, Sr. and his mother Angela. The memoir covers the life of Frank and his family’s condition during his childhood, the stories from that time, and more majorly his own life in Limerick, Ireland.
There are many terms by which Malachy, Sr. can be described. But as the memoir presents, it is best to describe him as a drunkard. He is not pious, nor litigious or inviolate. He is somewhat of a poltroon, which is another term for a coward. But Malachy, Sr. isn't exactly a coward for even though he did not seem to do things in the right way, he still gets them done in as much as he can manage. He married Angela after being pressured and because of their Catholic faith. Moreover, he also instills the fondness of storytelling in his child and we also come to know that his drinking is a way to hide his bereavement and misfortune.
Thus, the <u>correct description for Malachy, Sr. is option E</u>.
Answer:
A. who scorned the tick of the falling weather.
Explanation:
A traditional villanelle is a poetic form that has five tercets and a quatrain that acts as the closing stanza. The tercets are a three-line stanza while a quatrain is a four-line stanza. Moreover, it follows a pattern where the first and last line of the first tercet acts as the third line in the following tercets, alternating between the two.
Simply put, the first line of the first stanza will become the third line in the second and fourth stanza. Similarly, the third line of the first stanza will become the third line of the third and fifth stanzas. and these two lines will become the closing lines of the quatrain.
So, in keeping with the traditional villanelle structure, the last line of the poem "Lament" by Sylvia Plath will be <u><em>"who scorned the tick of the falling weather."</em></u>