In Act 1, scene 3 of "Hamlet" we can see that Laerte is packing to travel to Paris.
<h3>How does this scene take place?</h3>
- At the beginning of scene 3, the reader can see that Laertes is getting ready to travel.
- While packing, he advises his sister Ophelia about her involvement with Hamlet.
- He tells Ophelia that this involvement is not right, as Hamlet is in a much higher social position than hers, as well as being involved in the political affairs of the kingdom.
- He believes that this would make Hamlet never love Ophelia honorably and honestly, as she deserved.
Ophelia knows that her brother is correct, but asks him to take care of himself in Paris and not give advice that he himself cannot fulfill.
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This is because the Spanish monarchy had been in great relations with the Catholic church and had many ties with it. Many Spanish cardinals were popes even. As Protestantism spread it's influence throughout Europe, Spaniards opposed it due to their connection to Catholicism.
Prefixes: Ex, Im, Tele, or Trans.
Answer: APOTHECARY: My poverty, but not my will, consents.
In this excerpt, we see an apothecary (the equivalent of a pharmacist nowadays) and Romeo. Romeo wants to buy poison, while the apothecary refuses to sell it to him because it is illegal. However, Romeo can tell the man is very poor. He is thin, looks hungry and is obviously in need. Romeo tells him to ignore the law, because he could use the benefit of the money he is willing to pay. The apothecary sells him the poison, but tells him that he does so unwillingly, because of his poverty. The conflict is between two factors that are important to him: on the one hand, his values tell him that it is wrong to break the law, and on the other, his poverty forces him to break it anyway.