Horatio is Hamlet's closest friend, and he's the only one who really seems to deserve the title. Unlike Rosencrantz and Guildenstern (also Hamlet's old chums), Horatio's loyalty and common sense are rock-steady throughout the play.
In fact, one of the first things we learn about Horatio is his good sense. When we first see Horatio, he's been called to the castle by the guards because he's a "scholar" (he goes to school in Wittenberg with Hamlet). That means he should be able to judge whether or not the apparition that's been appearing on the battlements is actually a ghost. According to Marcellus, Horatio says that the ghost is "but [the guards'] fantasy, / And will not let belief take hold of him" (1.1.28-29).
He's convinced of the spirit's legitimacy soon enough, but his initial skepticism introduces the first note of doubt in the play, one that will haunt his friend Hamlet for several acts.
A land covered with forest suitable.
Hope I Helped (=^-^=)
(Its Timberland not "tomporland")
Answer:
You in the photo
Explanation:
because if you got other people in the photos they want accept it
Answer:
B
Explanation:
it is B. the topic sentence
The demons took the growth of the face of that man and gave it to the other person in the end of the story.
<u>Explanation:</u>
In the story how an old man lost his wen, the demons took away the growth of the face of a man upon a promise that they made to him and gave it to the other man who came to enjoy in their festivities and they gave it to him because they thought that he was the same person.
This growth was not given back to him because he had broken his promise and did not go back to the party of the demons.