In Shakespeare's Macbeth, Act 4, scene 1, lines 97-105, Macbeth receives three apparitions which provide him with three pieces of a prophecy (1- Beware of Macduff, 2- Macbeth cannot be harmed by someone born form a woman, 3- Macbeth will not be defeated until the Birnam Wood walks to Dusinane Hill). After hearing this prophecy, he feels pleased and safe to know that he will be king until the day he dies (lines 103-105: <em>"... Macbeth</em><em>Shall live the lease of nature, pay his breath To time and mortal custom."</em>). However, he is still eager to know if Banquo and his offspring will reign eventually (lines 105-108: <em>Yet my heart Throbs to know one thing. Tell me, if your art can tell so much: shall Banquo’s issue ever Reign in this kingdom?</em>). This goes to show that he didn't feel like he had enough with knowing he would be king for his entire life, he also had to know that Banquo would not reign. This shows how irrationally ambitious and egotistical he had become.
" she finished the Sprint with the speed of a cheetah ." is matallingual language
the first is where and when and the second is theme
The allusion in the scarlet letter refers to Daniel a wise biblical prophet. The speaker in that excerpt expected the reader to know this information that Daniel had the gift of answering difficult riddles and interpreting dreams.
<h3>What is an Allusion?</h3>
In literature, an allusion is an indirect reference to a person, event, or thing, as well as a section of another text.
The majority of allusions are founded on the premise that the reader is in the know about an idea that is commonplace and that the reader would grasp the author's reference thereby.
Learn more about Allusions at:
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1.My aunt stared at the ant. 2. They're grabbing their stuff. 3. I threw my self through the bush. 4. I went to the gym and saw Jim. 5. I saw a sail boat which was on sale. Hope this helps! ^-^