All these<span> poems are written in </span>decasyllabic<span> rhymed verse, with varied arrangement of the rhymes. An Introduction to the Study of Browning. Arthur Symons. The </span>decasyllabic line<span> was an old measure; so was the seven-</span>line<span> stanza, both in Provençal and French. Medieval English Literature William Paton Ker. The whole ten ...</span>
The answer is D. Hope that helped.
No one knows.
an unnamed narrator
Macbeth's "tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow" speech in Act 5, scene 5 acts as Macbeth's farewell. In it he thinks about the meaning of life and decides that death is something that comes to everyone, people are all just walking the earth with no importance. "Signifying nothing" at the end refers to man's life, it means nothing, according to Macbeth. He relates a person's life to an actor who plays a part on a stage for a couple hours and then disappears, doesn't exist anymore.
This speech shows that he has essentially given up (in his mind) and thinks that life is meaningless.