Answer: In some societies, students are expected to identify a career by the time they enter high school. Their courses of study in high school are selected to guide them toward a specific career. Do you think it is good idea for students to commit to a career at a young age? Take a position on this issue. Support your response with reasons and examples.
Explanation: Hope this helps sho.rty :)
be more specific about this question please.
Answer:
Received a letter from Macbeth.
Explanation:
William Shakespeare's "Macbeth" revolves around the rise and fall of Macbeth. Through murderous acts and nefarious plans, Macbeth tried to become the king of Scotland, aided by his wife and the knowledge of the three witches who had prophesied his rise and eventual destruction.
In Act 1 scene v, we see Lady Macbeth reading a letter from her husband Macbeth. In it, he told her about the three witches and their prophecy and how it became true for he had just been declared "Thane of Cawdor".
Thus, Lady Macbeth learned about the prophecies from her husband's letter.
Answer: Williams compares the world after the war to a dying landscape. Through a number of metaphors, the poet describes the terrible consequences of the war.
Explanation:
<em>"Spring and All"</em> is a poem by William Carlos Williams (1883 – 1963). In order to understand the poem, it is important to note that it was written towards the end of World War I. The world still suffered the consequences of the war, and was slowly recovering.
That being said, the poet uses a number of metaphors to both describe the terrible consequences of war, and yet leave the readers hopeful about the future. At the beginning of the poem, Williams describes a road which leads to a "contagious hospital", and the dying landscape by the road. There are bushes that have become twigs and muddy fields. The adjectives that Williams uses to describe the landscape serve as a metaphor for the state of the world at the end of the war:
<em>"....small trees
</em>
<em>with</em><em> dead, brown leaves </em><em>under them
</em>
<em>leafless vines</em><em>."</em>
Just like the nature, the world as people knew it before the war has also become unrecognizable. However, there is a change of tone at the end of the poem. Williams announces the beginning of spring, which will bring life. There is a promise of a better future that will come after the war.