I'd say B. Filling character limit here.
Answer:
The correct answer is <u>C</u>: He ponders whether a miserable life if better than the unknown of death.
Explanation:
In his <em>To be or not to be</em> soliloquy, Hamlet questions whether it is better to accept a miserable life, with all of its problems and complications, like poverty, diseases, and aging, or choose death over life. He says that life is a lack of power, at the mercy of fortune and he realizes that if he chooses to live he would have to accept all of its obstacles, but if he chooses death, his decision would be irrevocable and he would suffer in hell because it is against the Catholic religion to commit such a crime against himself.
This is an existential speech, where Hamlet contemplates about the sense of life and asks himself if it is better to be alive or to be dead. Although he is talking about death, he doesn't intend to die, but to describe how people are afraid of many things just because those things are unknown to them.
Hamlet finally resolves to get revenge on Claudius in Act 4 when he sees Fortinbras' troops. He finds out that they are fighting for a tiny plot of land. When he thinks about the fact that 20,000 soldiers are willing to give up their lives for something that barely even matters, he is disgusted with his own inability to act and says from now on he will only think of getting revenge.
Dickens was the master of social critique in his era, which he demonstrated in his various novels like A Tale of Two Cities, Little Dorrit, Bleak House, Oliver Twist, Great Expectations, among others. One of the most popular characters created by Dickens is Scrooge (A Christmas Carol), a wealthy, bitter man who looks down at life and puts his greed and ambitions above anything, and anyone, else. The reason why this is one of the stand-outs is because Scrooge represented many things that were wrong in Great Britain. The nation had gone through an economic boom and people were very absorbed by social constructs such as class and nobility. They were so in-deep that many forgot the value of life in society, and the importance of healthy interactions for healthy people.
This is supported by the portrayal of another of Dickens's characters; <span>Miss Havisham from<em> </em><span><em>Great Expectations</em>. Interestingly enough, she happens to be the sad consequences of society's never-ending thirst for wealth as she is left at the altar by a man who only wanted to marry her for her money. After that, she seems to <em>lose it</em> and spends the rest of her days living with her wedding dress and wearing only one shoe. Later on, she adopts Estella and raises her to be cold and heartless in order protect her from the same evil she had to endure. This supports the thought that Dickens believed that, by not considering other people in society, we jeopardize our own futures.</span></span>
Answer:
Her lips were as red as roses in the spring.
Because it the sentence described the girls lip with sth other than simple expression.