Time heals all wounds. Possible kindness is rewarded but the former makes more sense to me :)
Answer:
its C
Explanation:
i did this question a long time ago
Not sure if correct
Hamlet does accept the duel however, for two reasons: firstly, it offers him an opportunity to resolve his conflict with Laertes, whose forgiveness he craves (a fencing duel with foils - blunted blades - is a courtly sport after all, and chiefly an exercise in male bonding).
Secondly, and more significantly, Hamlet is world-weary and ready to succumb to any outside agency.
Answer:
A and E.
Explanation:
"The Time Traveller's Guide to Elizabethan England" is a masterwork penned by Ian Mortimer. Ian Mortimer is a historian who has written many historical novels. The Time Traveller's Guide to Elizabethan England is one of them. The writer has used diary entries, letters, and other works of the day to write this book.
There are two ideas that the writer has picturized in the given passage. One is that a flat field was an easy land for farming and agricultural purposes and second, hills and mountains were a difficult track of traveling for travelers. For people today, hills and mountain climbing is a form of adventure whereas, in those days, it was considered an obstacle.
So, the correct options are A and E.