<span>In
his relationship with Stephano, Caliban is deemed more pathetic than
in his relationship to Prospero. He lets go of his rebellious
attitude and he willingly becomes a slave to Stephano, who is know as
a drunkard and a buffoon,
Caliban shows himself to be in a pathetic state. The strong and
vicious curses that he had sent to his old master Prosphero are
replaced by requests to lick the shoe of Stephano.</span>
<span>I
hope this helps, Regards.</span>
Hi!
The statement that best explains this is:
The allusion highlights ideas that relate to the murder of King Hamlet.
We see that in the myth of the Trojan War, Pyrrhus eventually kills Priam (the King of Troy). Pyrrhus was elated to have done this deed, and that to with Priam's wife, Hecuba, beholding the sight. Priam had caused the war that had eventually resulted in he death of Pyrrhus's father, Achilles, and so by killing him, Pyrrhus was successful in avenging his father.
The reason Hamlet alludes as this particular story is to establish that his motive is similar to that of Pyrrhus's in that Hamlet seeks to avenge the death of his father by killing the King, Claudius, in the presence of his own mother, and Claudius's wife, Gertrude.
So just to be clear, the hints at the following roles:
Hamlet as Pyrrhus
Claudius as Priam
Gertrude as Hecuba
I think all of them would be
I don’t think age should determine whether you take part in marches and protests becuase children do have views of situations and everyone’s opinion is valid for that matter. children have a brain of their own and are old enough do stand up for their beliefs