In Sonnet 55, Shakespeare writes to a friend about how much he loves him/her.
The poem that Shakespeare is writing, he says, will immortalize his friend, making him/her live forever. Shakespeare says that the poem will outlive monuments, which can crumble over time. Neither time nor war can destroy "the living record of your memory" -- this poem and the memories of you.
At the end of the poem, the friend rises on the day of judgement. At that time, his friend will realize how much Shakespeare has loved him/her and how Shakespeare gave him/her immortality through this poem.
Answer:
Its Jack and Jill.
Explanation:
They are the ones who made the wishes to be in a fairy tale
Answer: b He talks in his sleep when she's close to him; Images from his new book
Explanation:
In <em>The Book Thief,</em> Max Vandenburg is a Jew who is hiding out with the Hubermanns family. When Max reaches the Hubermanns' house, he sleeps for three days and in this time mentions names and shakes quite a bit sometimes even disagreeing with someone or thing in his sleep which scares Liesel.
Another way Max scares Liesel is when she looks in a book he is writing where he draws pictures of Hitler spewing propaganda and a picture of a couple standing over dead bodies under a swastika sun.