Answer:
Laertes resolves to act and get revenge immediately for his father while Hamlet cannot decide or act.
Explanation:
Laertes and Hamlet have one thing in common:<u> they both lose their fathers </u>in the play. However, <u>their reaction is very different</u>. Hamlet, even after the confirmation of the ghost of his father, he hesitates and thinks a lot about who is to blame, and what he should do about it. Whereas Laertes, as soon as he finds out about the death of his father he decides to revenge and he actually does something.
In Act 4 Scene 5 Lines 109-110, Laertes enters Elsinore Castle decided to kill whoever killed his father, he is resolved to act:
<em>"Let come what comes, only I'll be revenged most thoroughly for my father"</em>
Answer:
Examples are: for, because, as, since, therefore, hence, as a result, consequently, due to, because of, as a result of etc. ... He must be asleep for there is no light in his room. I decided to call it a day – for I was feeling tired.
Explanation:
The ninth line of the sonnet brings in a major change of tone. Shakespeare jumps on elaborating the immortality of his lover rather than continuing the criticism of the sun. Moreover, the limitations of nature are replaced by his lover’s thoughts and he claims that his darling is not bounded by the rules that are being displayed.
In line-4, the summer is stated as ”eternal summer”, since it keeps returning every year. And noticing from the previous personifications employed in the sonnet, we can easily recognize the similarity between “summer’s day” and “thee”. Both can be eternal or can fade with time. This is the major reason why the author takes a turn on line-9, as both of them have only one threat-time; and the third force that can eternalize them both is the poetry that the author has created.
To conclude, we can easily notice the turn in topic and breaking of the stanza.
Answer:
I am very thirsty so I will drink some water.