Not Waving but Drowning Theme of Death. You'd think that there couldn't be a clearer distinction than the one between life and death, but "Not Waving but Drowning" goes out of its way to muddy the water, so to speak. The focus, after all, is a talking corpse who just won't shut up even though the living can't hear him.
The answer is.. Freedom
Hope this helps!!
Answer and Explanation:
Romeo and Paris are similar only in their desire to marry J * and their admiration for her. However, the difference between these two characters is more striking than their similarities. That's because Romeo is a kind guy who wins J*'s heart that corresponds to his feelings for her. However, Paris is an arrogant and petty boy with manias of greatness that J * despises and disapproves of.
J*'s family wants her to marry Paris, since she has already secretly married Romeo. This makes J* pretend he died so he can get away with Romeo. However, Romeo learns of J*'s death as if it were something real and when he arrives at the crypt where her body is kept, he fights with Paris who was watching over her, and ends up killing him. Then Romeo, desolated by the girl's death, kills himself and J* upon waking up to see Romeo dead, she kills hierself too.
The target for an audience for an open letter is a specific individual! For more information go to: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_letter
I believe the correct answer is: the claim of a human tyrant
of enduring glory is transient.
The theme of "Ozymandias", a poem written by Percy
B. Shelly, can be said to be that the claim of a human tyrant of enduring glory
is transient. This theme may be even broader, meaning that everything humans accomplish
is transient such as Ozymandias’ glory in this poem.