Style and class and money
He frames Hagrid for Myrtle's death, when the culprit was really Tom himself, controlling the basilisk.
Answer:
This push Will chair me ever or dissect me now. I have liv'd long enough: my way of life Is fall'n into the searching, the yellow leaf; And that which should accompany old age
Answer:
In Act II, Scene 1, Brutus asks Lucius:
Is not tomorrow, boy, the ides of March?
Lucius does not know, so Brutus sends him to look at the calendar. This appears to be Shakespeare's way of letting his audience know that tomorrow will be the day the Soothsayer warned Caesar about in Act I, Scene 2.
Soothsayer:
Beware the ides of March.
Caesar:
What man is that?
Brutus:
A soothsayer bids you beware the ides of March.
When Lucius returns and confirms that tomorrow is the ides of March, it is especially significant because Brutus was present to hear the Soothsayer's warning to Caesar. This should inform the audience that the great historical event being dramatized on the Elizabethan stage is about to take place. Brutus may feel that Caesar's assassination was predestined by the gods or by Fate. When Caesar hears the Soothsayer's warning in Act I, Scene 2, he does not take it seriously. He says,
Answer:
it means something that is bare like for example your "bare" hands
Explanation:
its a word with a meaning that i know. but i haven't read the poem.