Answer:
Explanation:
The choices of parents are not the choices of their children
The children gain agency to act by the end of the poem, with the implication that they will act better than their parents.
The lines show the strength of children, as they continue to succeed even without their parents.
<span>1. They underscore the fact that everyone makes mistakes. In modern vernacular, Shakespeare is saying 'if I made a mistake, and you can prove it, I won't complain.'</span>
Answer:
In "Samuel's Memory", Samuel's father becomes sick and dies in the stockades. "Samuel's memory" is an account of the journey of Samuel Cloud, a Cherokee boy who turned 9 years old while on the Trail of Tears.
The end of Hamlet's life held one purpose: to his father's murder. Unfortunately, this vengeance also cost him his own life, as well as the lives of Ophelia, Polonius, Laertes, and his mother Gertrude. We must try to remember Hamlet as he was before his father's death: a diligent student and a leader of his people. Towards the end, as a sickness began to consume him, he lost some of the presence he once had, but he never lost the support of his people. We can all take comfort in the fact the struggles in his mind are now at an end.