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The brisk pace of the opening paragraph affect this story because;
- A.) It captures the excitement and happiness Ezra feels about getting his driver’s license.
At the beginning of this passage, the writer used short sentences that had a tone of excitement to capture the happiness that Ezra feels because of obtaining his driver's license.
When a person is excited, it is often captured in the excitement of the tone of their voice and the hurried manner they speak. Their words also have a brisk pace.
All of these characteristics are seen at the beginning of this passage and they accurately capture Ezra's excitement.
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The major theme of Paradise Lost is DISOBEDIENCE TO GOD'S COMMANDS.
Paradise lost is an epic poem that talked about Adam and Eve and how they lost their God given paradise as a result of yielding to the devil's temptation. The devil decided to defile the man, who is newly created by God as a revenge on God for sending him and other fallen angels out of heaven and he went ahead and made Adam and Eve to sin against God.
An emphasis on moral behavior (and the questioning of it) is at the core of "Romeo and Juliet". The main conflict revolves around it: how ethical it is to fall in love with my family's enemy? During the course of the drama, this moral question transforms into another one: How ethical it is to hate other people in the first place, based only on their surname?
The ethical question gets especially complicated when Juliet thinks about marrying Paris. To her, it seems as if she would betray Romeo, which she would never do; but the paradox is that if she betrayed Romeo, she would undo the betrayal of her family. In spite of that, she doesn't want to give up on her loyalty to Romeo. In Act 4, Scene 1, she says:
JULIET
O, bid me leap, rather than marry Paris,
From off the battlements of yonder tower,
Or walk in thievish ways, or bid me lurk
Where serpents are. Chain me with roaring bears;
Or shut me nightly in a charnel house,
O'ercovered quite with dead men's rattling bones,
With reeky shanks and yellow chapless skulls.
Or bid me go into a new-made grave
And hide me with a dead man in his shroud
<span>(Things that, to hear them told, have made me </span>
tremble),
And I will do it without fear or doubt,
<span>To live an unstained wife to my sweet love.</span>
Tight
taut rigid
stretched tight
stressed not slack
tightly stretched tense
stiff snug
contracted tightened
drawn strained
strung out tightly drawn
firm tensed