Answer:
In Act II, Scene 1, Brutus asks Lucius:
Is not tomorrow, boy, the ides of March?
Lucius does not know, so Brutus sends him to look at the calendar. This appears to be Shakespeare's way of letting his audience know that tomorrow will be the day the Soothsayer warned Caesar about in Act I, Scene 2.
Soothsayer:
Beware the ides of March.
Caesar:
What man is that?
Brutus:
A soothsayer bids you beware the ides of March.
When Lucius returns and confirms that tomorrow is the ides of March, it is especially significant because Brutus was present to hear the Soothsayer's warning to Caesar. This should inform the audience that the great historical event being dramatized on the Elizabethan stage is about to take place. Brutus may feel that Caesar's assassination was predestined by the gods or by Fate. When Caesar hears the Soothsayer's warning in Act I, Scene 2, he does not take it seriously. He says,
Assuming that you're referring to the Sojurner truth "ain't i a woman"
The quotation support the central idea that Men are not Better than women. From the quotation , she said that even God himself came from a woman, so there's no reason for men to lower women's value.
hope tihs helps
Answer:
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Symbolism is used in poems to express mystic ideas and emotions.
Explanation:
- In Tiger, Blake is puzzled when he first saw the tiger at night. He asks a series of questions about its fierce appearance and the creator who made it.
- It refers to symbolic myths about human life and society. It also compares the fierce condition of the tiger to that of a human being and explains the supreme power.
- Blake compares the lamb and the tiger. The lamb symbolizes good character, innocence and purity but the tiger symbolizes danger and fierceness.
Answer:
Explanation:
Strong: The CDC. . .
Fifty percent of americans. .
according to a study. . .
Weak:
I remember when. . .
in my opinion. . .