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Tcecarenko [31]
3 years ago
12

What do the servants' and musicians' reactions to juliet's death tell us about social class in elizabethan england? servants wer

e always completely devoted to their masters. the lower classes lived in a different "world" than the wealthy classes; the concerns of the "household" were not necessarily the concerns of the servants. unlike the upper classes, servants were petty and only cared about themselves. many in the lower classes were more spiritually mature than the upper classes in that they did not resort to excessive mourning when dealing with death?
English
2 answers:
emmainna [20.7K]3 years ago
8 0

Answer:

the answer is d as stated in the other answer

Misha Larkins [42]3 years ago
6 0
During the Elizabethan Era, the social class was divided into six classes as they believe that this is the basis of skills, fame, birth and wealth. During this era, the reactions of the servants' and the musicians' to the death of Juliet would show us that social class, unlike those in the upper classes, those in the lower classes display more maturity spiritually in dealing with death. 
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