Answer:
Explanation:Treasure Island is supposed to be a novel for boys. This is coming out of stodgy, Victorian England, so girls aren't supposed to want to sail away and hunt for treasure. But some of us here at Shmoop are both girls and want to go on treasure hunts, so we still love this book. Robert Louis Stevenson gives us a main character with whom his desired audience of ordinary boys can identify: a smart lad without too much money or education who comes out all right in the end. Sure Jim Hawkins is a little more imaginative and adventurous than many, but he is still average enough to be relatable.
The author uses the literary device personification in “Ah Loneliness”. Personification is giving a humanlike quality to something that is not human. In the poem the speaker talks to Loneliness as if it is a person that can talk back to him. He even capitalizes the L at the beginning of loneliness like you would the name of a person.
The answer is, "Friar Laurence is assuring the Capulets that Juliet is happy in heaven."
If you look more into the full excerpt, you can see that Friar Laurence's whole monologue was meant to comfort the Capulet's regarding Juliet's death so that they would stop crying. He continues to reassure them that Juliet is in a better place in heaven and that they have no reason to continue crying.