Answer:
I love autumn it is my favorite season- c.
<span>Ross arrives and announces that Macbeth is to be the new Thane of Cawdor, thus confirming the first prophecy of the Witches. Banquo and Macbeth are struck dumb for the second time, but now Shakespeare contrasts their responses. Banquo is aware of the possibility that the prophecies may have been the work of supernatural dark forces, as exemplified in his lines "What? Can the Devil speak true?" (108) and "oftentimes, to win us to our harm, / The instruments of Darkness tell us truths . . . — (only) to betray us" (123-125). Macbeth is more ambiguous. His speech is full of what will now become his trademark — questioning, doubting, weighing up, and seeking to justify: "This supernatural soliciting / Cannot be ill; cannot be good" (130-131).</span>
D i believe is the answer
Answer:
l have read your book yet is already affirmative
Explanation:
Passini's long pieces of dialogue in<em> A Farewell to Arms </em>(1929) indicate that Passini feels passionately about his beliefs.
In this excerpt from Ernest Hemingway's novel, Passini is fully convinced that a war never finishes and that victory is only an illusion. He believes that victory does not mean the end of a war since enemies will keep fighting. He also argues that the real victory, which is the end of the war, could only be achieved if one side stops fighting. Passini defends his truth fiercely in his dialogue with the tenant by presenting a strong argument and using rhetorical questions.