<span>I'm thinking the moral of these stories are, If you want something bad enough, you have to fight for it and work for it.</span>
In the civil disobedience excerpt by Thoreau, the way that he supported his claim was by the use of: reasoning, showing the logical consequences of supporting a cause that is wrong.
<h3>How does Thoreau show reasoning?</h3>
According to him he is trying to say that people should be more obedient to a higher law and not just a civil law.
He tries to speak to the conscience and the fact that human law is not bigger than one's conscience.
Read more on civil disobedience here: brainly.com/question/325929
The answer is letter D. William Shakespeare's Sonnet 18 has a structure of fourteen <span>lines in an iambic pentameter with a </span>rhymed<span> couplet at the end. It has a rhyme scheme of abab cdcd efef gg. The first two lines rhyme with the third and fourth lines. The fifth and the sixth lines also rhyme with seventh and eighth lines, so as the ninth and tenth lines with the eleventh and twelfth lines. The thirteenth line rhymes with the fourteenth line, making them a rhymed couplet. </span>
B. first person. this allows you the see what and character is thinking and feeling
Capulet: [to Tybalt] You are a saucy boy – is 't so indeed? – / This trick may chance to scathe you.
Tybalt: I will withdraw; but this intrusion shall / Now seeming sweet convert to bitter gall.
Benvolio: Tybalt, the kinsman of old Capulet, / Hath sent a letter to his father’s house. . . . [Romeo] will answer the letter’s master, how he dares, being dared.
This is the correct answer