The boy's rendition of his late father's painting was an absolute monstrosity. It was unveiled right beside the old man's grave to a crowd of dishevelled bystanders, the ladies holding their billowing skirts down and the men scratching at their unkempt beards. It wasn't a particularly sacrilegious artwork, but the crowd would say otherwise. Hands jumped to mouths to keep a scream bottled in, eyes widened to the point of tearing. They'd never seen something quite like it.
These lines are spoken by Macbeth. First, he is generally meaning that life lacks substance, comparing life to an actor who, as said in the following line, doesn't have enough time on stage but is performing the best he can, nevertheless—until the play is abruptly over. In the last two lines, Macbeth is comparing life to a story told by someone who lacks intelligence; therefore, the story is nothing more than meaningless rambling.
Answer:
the baby is being looked after well by her
Explanation:
Answer:
Shakespeare used many literary devices (and also many poetic devices) – below are the most important ones, most central to his work.
- Allusion. This is a reference to a person, place, event, usually without explicit identification. ...
- Dramatic Device. ...
- Dramatic Irony. ...
- Monologue. ...
- Soliloquy. ...
- Symbolism.
Answer:
what do u need help with??
Explanation: