Answer:
I had a lover,
she was more like a fever,
to my parents,
the good one she ain't.
I told her sorry,
she became more angry.
I told my parents ,
they became arrogant.
I decide to let her go,
but her face would not .
I decide to leave my parents on the go,
but there face was like the cooking pot was hot.
Allas! I found a way ,
it is to get rid of them all,
yes, right now straight away.
By: meisbigbrain
Explanation:
Pls mark this as brainliest
This, is insane, I just got over this lesson in class. But It's defiantly D ( many times then were focused on romanticism rather than logic.
The best answer would be Letter B - to entertain.
The author merely would like to provide amusement to the readers at his expense. It certainly does not persuade, explain, nor inform anything since it states - <span>But why bother with the descriptions; you’ve probably already grasped the idea!</span> - which could be taken as a witticism.
He was looked up more from the writers as an inspiration, it was the other way around. The inspiration to Poe 's darkest and most well known poem, written in 1845, was a real raven that was the beloved pet of the writer Charles Dickens who named it Grip.
Answer:
A) Both Brutus and Antony ask rhetorical questions to make points.
Explanation:
Brutus and Antony both ask rhetorical questions. Isn't it? "Would you rather Caesar live and all slaves die than Caesar die and all free men live? ...Who is a bondman here?" Asks Antony "Did Caesar appear ambitious? Was it a goal?"
The other choices are incorrect. Brutus' ambition is not positive. He says he killed Caesar for his ambition. He probably wouldn't have killed him if he valued ambition. They didn't mention Caesar's flaws. Using the pronoun "you" directly addresses the crowd.