I do not think that Shakespeare sees evil as stronger than good or human
understanding because in the end, Scotland is returned to her rightful
king and Malcolm is an element of good in the play. Macbeth certainly
is taken over by his greed and ambition, and a sense of evil gets the
better of him and clouds his good judgment. However, evil overall does
not reign supreme, and the audience sees the harm that evil has caused
to Macbeth throughout the play. He has lost his wife, the loyalty of
his subjects, and his integrity. Macbeth knows that he should grow old
in the company of friends, but he acknowledges that he is now alone. So
evil does not overcome good in the end--evil leaves Scotland with the
beheading of Macbeth.
- hope this helps
An antecedent of a pronoun is a word that refers to the same thing as this pronoun.
here the pronoun is "theirs"
<em>Rivers stopped flowing along the bank's so that they could hear Orpheus, whose music was harmonious than </em><em>theirs.</em>
(all the words in Boldface refer to the same thing).
What does the "theirs" refer to? it refers to their music, and the they is the Rivers (it's a personification of rivers)
The antecedent is the river!
<u>Answer:</u>
Daisy opened up like a flower and showed her love for Gatsby.
<u>Explanation:</u>
The story ‘The great Gatsby’ by “F. Scott Fitzgerald” is a story about American dream that seems to be unattainable.
In the past, Gatsby and Daisy were in love. But they parted ways. After they reunited after five years, author depicts that their love blossomed again. Gatsby always dreamt of marrying Daisy and when he kissed Daisy, author depicts Daisy as a flower. She opened like a flower and showered her love for Gatsby again.
Gatsby had wealth and power. He always tried to win Daisy by showing his wealth through parties and was hopeful of winning her back.
Answer:
<u>he thought it was normal.</u>
Explanation:
The first and fourth syllable in each line it creates a sensation of horse hooves drumming on the ground.