The main idea of this poem is welcoming the new year and spring as an opportunity for a fresh start and new love. The closing lines sum up the main idea well:
"Then you faire flowre, in whome fresh youth doth raine,
<span> prepare your selfe new love to entertaine."
The 'fair flower' he is referring to is a woman, and he is telling her to get ready ('prepare your selfe') to entertain (discover) new love!</span>
This is Macbeth right?
if so then the Scottish Forces
option C
I’m pretty sure you don’t need a comma there. You would need a comma if it was like “Nakia likes to read comic books, magazines, and scary stories on the weekends.
They both are trying to show how people come together to pay tribute to the men who died while in war. The photo shows tribute while the poem is showing the reader the emotions of a visitor.
Answer:
She thinks he is too ugly and too small.
Explanation:
This question is about "The tale of Despereaux" where we know the story of Despereaux, a mouse very different from ordinary mice, both in appearance and in personality. Despereaux was born very small, smaller than all the mice ever seen in the world and has very large ears, disproportionate to his body. This makes Florence, his aunt, find him strange, ugly and too small, she doesn't like anything she sees and doesn't bother to tell everyone to hear that Despereaux is smaller than any mouse in the world and has obscenely large ears.