Answer:
Justice is not served to the wealthy the same way it is to the poor.
Explanation:
The quote we are studying here is an excerpt from "King Lear", by Shakespeare. It is exposing the different treatment given to rich and poor when it comes to justice. According to this quote, the rich get away with anything, never truly having to own up to their crimes, vices, or mistakes. The lance of justice breaks when it tries to pierce their fancy robes. In other words, money can buy impunity. On the other hand, the poor are easily punished, maybe even more than they truly deserve. A straw can pierce their rags. No matter how small their crime, they are surely going to pay for it with much more suffering than that crime really called for.
Answer:
The person above is correct
Explanation:
I got the answer right
Answer: I am writing to request permission for time off to be with my father for a day on January 1st. I will be held up because He wants to go see fireworks for new years. I will be done with my father in one week and I promise to get back to work immediately I am done.
Explanation:
<u>Similar responses:</u>
- In both the poems the beloved is seen responding to her lover and his love.
- In the first poem, the beloved has no issue with the lover forgetting her and the waves washing her name away. It is the lover who insists on eternalizing their love.
- The nymph too is not moved by all the material gifts given to her by her lover and speaks the truth when she says that if youth was to stay for long she wouldn’t mind being her beloved. Her approach to love is very straightforward and like the beloved in Spenser’s sonnet she is very candid to her lover baring her mind to him.