Answer:
Lady Macbeth's ambition to see her husband become King
Explanation:
After Macbeth's meeting with the three witches, he went ahead and told his wife of the revelations. Now, Macbeth wanted to rule, but left to him he wouldn't have committed the gruesome crime i.e murdering Duncan in cold blood. However, Lady Macbeth is not of the same sensibilities with her husband and would do anything to make him a King.
She pestered him incessantly and struck at his ego, he's being a coward for not doing what the witches had foretold. She manipulated Macbeth into killing Duncan and she implicated the innocent guards.
After this gruesome murder of an innocent man, neither Macbeth nor his wife know peace and the actions of that night ruined them all.
Brutus because of his soliloquies for the audience to gain an insight inot his complex motives and having to be a kind hearted, integrity of a character he had a tragic flaw (key element into knowing a tragic hero) was his lust for power I believe.
Answer:
Both texts present a moment of human weakness
Explanation:
The first text shows a moment when Ellen is going through a delicate moment, which left her fragile, with wounded pride and shaken vanity. The second text shows a moment when a character feels a strong fear for a situation that is happening at the moment and that makes him apprehensive.
Both texts present moments of human fragility, when an individual is vulnerable and may have abnormal attitudes as a way to protect himself.
Answer: Someone who doesn’t own multiple properties
Explanation: Just shows how much money you have
Answer:
The line that described the world of the lady of shallot were found in the stanzas five to eight of the book
Explanation:
The line that described how the world of the lady of Shalott differs from that of that of the Camelot from the book "The Lady of Shalott" written by Alfred, Lord Tennyson is written between stanzas five to eight of the book.
It described her as someone who suffers from a strange curse and that she must persistently weave images on her loom without looking out of the world directly, but alternatively, she can view the world through a mirror which always shows the reflection of the people of Camelot when passing by her island and also the busy street.
"Overlook a space of flowers,
And silent isle imbowers
The Lady of Shalott".