solution: "she walks in beauty" incorporates simile. If you read the complete line, it is "she walks in beauty, like the night..."; as movement of woman is compared to the movement of night sky using the word 'like', it is simile.
"a heart whose love is innocent" incorporates personification as it attributes human characteristic of innocence to woman's heart (non-human) to say that her inner qualities are as good as her appearance.
In act III, scene iii, Claudius is kneeling in prayer when Hamlet finds him. He doesn't kill him, even though he has the perfect opportunity, because "Now might I do it pat, now he is praying;/And now I'll do't./And so he goes to heaven;/And so am I revenged. That would be scann'd:/A villain kills my father; and for that,/I, his sole son, do this same villain send/To heaven."
<span>In the next scene, Hamlet mistakes Polonius hiding behind the arras for Claudius. Unlike, scene iii, he's not in prayer, so there is no similar worry about whether he'll go to heaven. </span>
<span>Throughout the play, Hamlet seems to have this inner conflict over whether revenge is the 'right' thing to do. And what comes after death from a Christian perspective, depending upon how a person meets their end. It's something that is dealt with in more detail in the 'to be or not to be' speech and the 'gravedigger' scene. </span>
<span>Hope that helps!</span>
Answer:B
Explanation:
Transition words are used to connect ideas or themes
The second one is correct because Lady Macbeth speaks to Macbeth privately in scenes 6-7 (I believe) of Act I and tells him that "the false face hides what the false heart doth know", which is basically telling him to make Duncan continue to think he means no harm, but to carry through with her plan of murder.