Good God ummm I think it might be B. One can assume that she hates Tybalt right about now since he tried to kill Romeo or he murdered Romeos BFF and you can also see that she doesnt seem to mad at the fact that Romeo killed him. She seems more mad at the fact that Romeo is banished. So shes basically throwing her cousins death out the window for her love so I would label this as Love and death. I my be wrong though so if I am then i'm sorry. I havent really read Shakesphere yet so i'm just going off of google and the excerpt that you put up and I could honestly find all 4 choices in the poem so yea Good Luck.
He accepted himself of how he looked.
Yeah, it is B. It kind of told you or you just highlighted it or something
Answer:
That is an oxymoron.
Explanation:
An oxymoron is a figure of speech in which apparently contradictory terms appear in conjunction. In this case, the contradictory terms that are in conjunction are "terribly" and "nice". These words are words that mean the opposite of each other - with terribly usually being used to describe something bad - and nice being used to describe something good - and are being put together.
Hello! I would say the narrator is insane because he can still hear the old man’s heart thumping from underneath the floorboards even after he killed him. His guilt gets the better of him and he turns himself in to the cops. I don’t have any evidence sense I don’t have the story on me, but use something from the story along the lines where he “hears” the thumping of his heart as evidence.