Lupercal alludes to an important patriotic festival, and celebratigmCaesar on Lupercal indicates his high position in Rome
Answer: Option D.
<u>Explanation:</u>
The back ground information is provided here and based on that information, we see that Marullus refers to Lupercal and while referring to Lupercal, he is having some kind of fear and is scared.
But Flavius tries to explain it to him that whatever is been done, nothing is important among all this and it is to be made sure that the statutes which are decorated are not done as a tribute to Cezar.
<u>Answer:</u>
<em>"(the soil)/ Is bare now, nor can feet feel, being shod," </em>- by analysing the line, we deduce that Hopkins means people are out of touch with God because they're out of touch with the earth.
<em>The correct option is Option D. </em>
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<u>Explanation:</u>
Gerard Manley Hopkins’s “God’s Grandeur,” is an exploration of the bond between Nature and God. It is about how the Almighty is infused in everything around us, despite man’s effort to ruin everything. When the sonnet was written, industrial and commercial revolutions were at their peak which put extra pressure on the environment. To express his concern and to cause awareness among others, Hopkins penned down this beautiful realisation.