This question is missing the options. I've found them online. They are the following
[...] Which event most directly caused the council to order the closure of all theaters in London?
A. Jonson becoming a playwright
B. Jonson and Nashe writing The Isle of Dogs
C. the clergy pardoning Jonson
D. the actor being killed in a duel
Answer:
The event that most directly caused the council to order the closure of all theaters was:
B. Jonson and Nashe writing The Isle of Dogs
Explanation:
The excerpt lists a sequence of events that shows how agitated and troubled Jonson's life was. However, <u>it is at the end that the cause of the closure is explained: "[...]The Isle of Dogs, coauthored with Thomas Nashe, is so slanderous and offensive that the privy council orders the closure not just of the play but of every theater in London." Clearly, what made the council decide to close all theaters was the fact that "The Isle of Dogs" was offensive. Therefore, writing such a play was the event that most directly led to the closure of the theaters.</u>
Answer:
Do not insult my intelligence.
The main theme of this essay is to expose the disadvantages of building housing developments on ridgetops, thereby accomplishing the purpose of urging readers to dissuade such developments. From the nature of its one sided view of the disadvantages of ridgetop development, it is definitely a persuasive essay.
Answer:
He tries to keep peace because Tybalt, a Capulet, is now related to him by marriage, but he feels a strong sense of revenge after Tybalt kills Mercutio.
Explanation:
Answer:
He becomes very ill and nearly dies.
Explanation:
Elie Wiesel's memoir "Night" recounts the events that led to the Jewish discrimination that would become of the most horrendous crimes in world history. The Holocaust led to the deaths of millions of people, especially the Jews, after the Nazi regime under Hitler decided to prosecute them, making the event the worst genocide.
Despite the horrible conditions of living in the concentration camps, and the majority of his family dying during it, Elie Wiesel managed to survive. In the last part of the memoir, Elie mentioned <em>"Three days after the liberation of Buchenwald, I became very ill: some form of poisoning. I was transferred to a hospital and spent two weeks between life and death."</em> But he recovered and became a recipient of the 1986 Nobel Peace Prize.