The correct answer to this open question is the following.
The man that speaks those words is Sir Thomas More. Those words appear in <em>"A Man for All Seasons."</em>
English writer Robert Bolt wrote the play "A Man for All Seasons" in 1954. It first appeared as a version to the radio, and later for television. The play debuted in the Globe Theater in London, in 1960. It is based on the life of Sir Thomas More (1478-1535) an English philosopher and humanist of the Renaissance that opposed to the theology of Martin Luther and Reformation. He was sentenced to death after he rejected to take the Supremacy Oath required to swear allegiance to the Church of England.
B. He is jealous of Caesar
Answer:
D
Explanation:
because of the following characteristic: It isn't built from specific rhyme metrics. ... Therefore, the characteristic that makes "Song of Myself" a free verse poem is its lack of rhymes that follow a metric.
The "me" is sentence 1 should be "I". The "our's" in the parentheses should be "ours", and the "me" should be "I" again. The "I" in the 2nd sentence after the parentheses should be "me". The "our's" in the 4th sentence after the parentheses should be "ours". In the sentence after, the "him" should be "he". In the sentence "The choice of party theme was her's", the "her's" should be "hers". And, in the sentence "They are afraid that friends won't come to their's if...", the "their's" should be "theirs". Finally, the "I" in the second to last sentence should be "me".