I believe the answer is C.
Answer:
Explanation:
King Claudius sends a letter to the King of Norway to tell young Fortinbras to back off from his plans to attack Denmark. (Act 1, scene 2, I believe) Basically "something is rotten in the state of Denmark" - speaker: Marcellus, a guard, who talks to his philosophical comrade, Horatio, saying, “Something is rotten in the state of Denmark …“ (Act-I, Scene-IV). The reason of saying this is just not that Denmark is facing dirt. It means that the situation of Denmark is similar to a fish that rots from head to tail, or in other words, it shows that everything is not good at top of political hierarchy.
For personal freedom it’d be the automobile otherwise it would be the railroad system.
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The author uses fire to make the reader imagine the power, dreadfulness, and fear the Tyger brings upon others. This imagery creates a daunting mood. "In what distant deeps or skies Burnt the fire of thine eyes?" The blazing fire of the Tyger actually means, the bright stripes and bright-orange colors of the Tyger. The blazing fire in the eyes can represent multiple things such as; power, fear, etc.
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Fire could also represent the capability, potential, and dynamism of the Tyger. To prove this, it is written in the poem, "What immortal hand or eye Could frame thy fearful symmetry?" Meaning the power of the Tyger could make powerful immortals bow before the Tyger's will.
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They were motivated by a bet. She, Percy, Byron, and John Polidori made a bet as to who could write the best horror story in a short period of time. Needless to say that she won since Frankenstein instantly became a classic and is still one of the most important horror stories in literature history.