Answer:
This forms the basis for Hamlet's quest for revenge. Hamlet is disgusted by his mother's marriage and obsessed with her sexuality, and he sees Claudius for what he is: amoral, manipulative, and preoccupied with power
Answer:
A. To demonstrate Equiano's lack of knowledge about European customs due to living in an isolated part of the continent.
Explanation:
Olaudah Equiano in the autobiography written by him demonstrated all the travails he went through while being transported across the Atlantic Ocean by the White men. In paragraph five, Equiano asked a series of questions to his fellow countrymen on board with him on the ship. He asked about the country of the white men, and if they had their own women. He also asked about how the vessel could go and was amazed when the workings of the vessel were explained to him.
All these show that Equiano had no knowledge of the European way of life because he had lived in Africa all his life.
Lucy is the answer on Odyssey
I am not too sure if these are the only such lines, but here is one deifinitely good answer:
'My will to her consent is but a part.
An she agreed within her scope of choice"
They are from Scene 2.
Those words mean that Capulet's daughter is free to choose her husband, at least in part (with the father's agreement)