Answer: "Pangs of dispriz'd love" refers to Hamlet's relationship with Ophelia. She was ordered by her father to rebuke, or reject, his affections. So this quote is basically Hamlet saying "pains of despised love," referencing his rejection.
Answer:
No, they most likely don't anymore today because we have satellite technology and unmanned drone spy planes.
The line "Clear was the light of loveliness / That<span> lit her face like rain;" is an example of the use of the figurative language which is Simile. In this line, the "light" of loveliness which lit her face is being compared to the rain. A Simile is a figurative language that compares two different things using the words "like" or "as...as". </span>
Answer:Sindbad the Sailor, Sindbad also spelled Sinbad, hero of The Thousand and One Nights who recounts his adventures on seven voyages. He is not to be confused with Sindbad the Wise, hero of the frame story of the Seven Wise Masters.
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