I think this is of the English book chapter going home if so the write longed for the holidays so that he could visit his family and celebrate dashain with them.
Barter can mean to beat something or for something to be beaten on
Answer:
<em>Little inferior; whom my thoughts pursue</em>
<em>With wonder, and could love, so lively shines </em>
and
<em>In them Divine resemblance, and such grace </em>
<em>The hand that formd them on their shape hath pourd.</em>
Explanation:
These two sets of lines show how Satan acknowledges the goodness of God. In the first set, Satan tells us that his "thoughts pursue" God, and he also talks about love and shine. In the second set of lines, Satan talks about God's "divine resemblance," and he tells us that he made his creations with "grace." All of these positive words show that Satan feels some kind of respect towards God.
So there’s this moment in the play Julius Caesar where one Roman nobelman says to another, “The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars but in ourselves, that we are underlings.” And in the context of the play, that quotation makes perfect sense—these two guys did not suffer some unjust destiny; they made decisions that led them to their fates.<span>
However, that quote has since been decontextualized over and over and used universally as a way of saying that the fault is not in the stars (i.e., fate/luck/whatever) but in individual people.</span>