Caesar recognizes that certain events lie beyond human control; to crouch in fear of them is to enter a paralysis equal to, if not worse than, death. It is to surrender any capacity for freedom and agency that one might actually possess. Indeed, perhaps to face death head-on, to die bravely and honorably. In the end, Brutus interprets his and Cassius’s defeat as the work of Caesar’s ghost—not just his apparition, but also the force of the people’s devotion to him, the strong legacy of a man who refused any fear of fate and, in his disregard of fate, seems to have transcended it.
Answer:
I would start something like "The (book, poem whatever) starts with...)
When I went shopping. I bought a pair of running shoes, a red shirt, and blue shorts.
The best answer is that the verb tenses shift.
If the verbs were consistent, they would more appropriately be as follows:
While my dad brings the car around, I wait with the grocery cart.
or, alternatively:
While my dad was bringing the car around, I was waiting with the grocery cart.
Answer:
Mrs. Mallard bursts out weeping when she hears the news of her husband’s death.
Explanation:
The correct answer is that Mrs. Mallard bursts out weeping when she hears the news of her husband's death.
The other options are all part of the irony in the story in that they all suggest the opposite of what was really said.
In the midst of Mrs. Mallard’s grief, she sees and hears the signs of spring. This sentence have the word grief but then she sees and hears the signs of spring, which is quite ironic as they she is supposed to be thinking of sad and gloomy things. The other sentences are also ironic as they aren't really what they mean.
When she sees her husband, Mrs. Mallard dies of heart failure.
The doctors diagnose the death of Mrs. Mallard as “joy that kills.”
Mrs. Mallard did die and at the exact time she sees her husband is alive, but not because of the relief of his safety but rather in the joy of knowing that she is finally free from him.