Answer and Explanation:
Nora and Mrs. Linde are characters in the play "A Doll's House". Nora is being blackmailed by Krogstad for having illegally taken a loan at the bank where her husband, Torvald, works.
<u>Near the end of Act Two, Nora says that something glorious is going to happen. She is not talking - not even thinking - of killing herself in case her husband finds out. As a matter of fact, </u><u>the glorious thing she is expecting is for her husband to take the blame for her and save her from this threat. Unfortunately, nothing of that sort happens.</u><u> </u><u>Nora's husband is a cruel, sexist man, who values himself above everyone else. </u><u>Readers/viewers most likely saw that coming; it is Nora that was too naive, who failed to see him as the puppet master he truly is. </u><u>When she realizes Torvald has no intention of protecting her, she finally opens her eyes to how rotten her marriage is. She can now see she is only his little doll, something for him to dress up and play with. This is what Nora needed to finally awaken.</u>
I believe that this means that even though they know that they're eventually going to die, they don't want to until they have done something that's impacted the world in a big way, causing them to fight against death.
Answer:
Yes, they do. The setting, of course, reflects the uncivilized, scary practices of General Zaroff on the island itself. This is a wild and dangerous place; the setting alone would strike fear into the hearts of most regular people. However, Rainsford manages to show his stuff early on in the story by...
Well that is because no one is that stupid to get involved with an old guy who has a hook and a long black hair.
I would have to say formal, mainly because I looked it up on google.