The youth is like a pile of ashes as, youth burns bright but like a fire ultimately dies out.
By this line Shakespeare tried to reflect the reality/fact of youth by the means of life, death and growing old, that how near the deathbed is to the one who has come across that long journey of life.
It is so because the Shakespeare has described in his sonnet youth as by using metaphor i.e., pile of ashes. Here he meant that youth is also a timely/time bound thing which is one day going to be ashes as it burn bright like fire but just like that it dies out by the end.
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ok so there's this show on netflix called the who was show it's like the who was books but it a show instead, and i think the last episode is abt julius cesar
my brother watches it all the time hope this helps
If you're meaning just a sentence with these two words, then:
She approached the significant hole in the wall, peering through it, a soft sigh of defeat passing her lips when she saw that the impenetrable vault she was meant to go wasn't there.
That help any?
Scared, curiousity, uneasiness