The sonnet begins by directly addressing Death's imposing dreadfulness, and directly afterwards planting a seed of doubt on its true power and reach. We can see that clearly in this first line "Death be not proud, though some have called thee Mighty and dreadful, for thou art not so; For those whom thou think'st thou dost overthrow Die not, poor Death, nor yet canst thou kill me".
In the next few lines, we are reminded that even though Death is in charge of delivering our deceased to the other side, there are many other direct dangers to the living such as poison, war and sickness. Those are the real things we should be afraid of. <u>Death itself has no real power other than executing its duty upon our mistakes and misfortunes which are the things that actually lead us to it in the first place</u>.
The other line that illustrates Death's power as an illusion would be: "And death shall be no more; Death, thou shalt die."
Hope this helps!
They escaped by making a spear and stabbing the cyclops in the eye so he could no longer see. Also then when the cyclops moved the boulder to get out of his cave, he felt all the sheep to make sure the men weren't escaping. So they grabbed on to the bottom of the sheep so he didn't know they were escaping.
<span>The audience can hardly see as it is dark and the picture of the train is coming</span>
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"Don't ever let your guard down. Don't let people better themselves off your expressions. Be stronger than that, and realize only you know yourself best. They assume."
In all realist cases, report to an authority. Have something done. Don't let it sit around and linger out longer than it needs to. Make sure you go to someone who can keep an eye on it, not someone who will just talk to someone and hope for it to stop.
I believe it would be B. Think of commas as pauses. Say it out load does it sound correct?