Answer:
Fausto's speech shows that he values immortality, self-preservation and the ability to depend on those who can promote his desires.
Explanation:
Faustus begs Helen to be his spiritual guide and to give him immortality, allowing him to have free will over where his soul should go. This shows that Faustus, despite his actions and the problems that he got into, killed his conscience of self-preservation and is afraid of what the da*nation of the soul can cause.
We can see this through the lines:
"Sweet Helen, make me immortal with a kiss. [ Kisses her .] Her lips suck forth my soul; see, where it flies!—Come, Helen, come, give me my soul again. Here will I dwell, for Heaven is in these lips, And all is dross that is not Helena.
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What is dismal about the hypothetical happenings Juliet
imagines in Act IV, Scene III, is that they are all quite morbidly pessimistic. She imagines that the potion could be
poison. She wonders if she’ll suffocate
in the tomb before she awakens and before Romeo comes for her. She wonders what it would be like to awaken in
the tomb before Romeo comes to her and where Tybalt is decomposing and wonders
if there will be ghosts. And, the last
hypothetical situation she ponders is whether or not she’ll go crazy in the
tomb, pull Tybalt’s corpse out of the burial garb and beat her brains out with a
relative’s bone. In addition to being
pessimistic, this is all quite dismal.
I think the theme of "Young Goodman Brown" is (D) The forest is a place where dark deeds take place.
This is because the author likens the forest to the unseen and naturally Goodman Brown expresses his distrust and fear as he cautiously enters it. The forest reflects the views of the 17th century Puritans who initially feared the forest but then also wanted to dominate it once they had overcome their fears. Goodman Brown also sees the Devil himself in the forest.
Over the past three years, Marcus has accumulated a sufficient amount of bird bones.