After sealing the deal
with the devil, an angel came to him to urge him to repent and put at end the
validity of their agreement. However, Faustus was very adamant. He became blind
to his own salvation.
I hope I was able to answer your question. Have a good day.
In his comedy "Poor Harold", Floyd Dell presents in a one act play depicts the adversity of Harold who wrote letters to a married woman without knowing that she was fond of having affairs despite being married.
In this excerpt from "Poor Harold.” the author represents all the bitterness, shame and some sort of resentment Harold has in his heart. By reading sentences like : "how was I to know that a rather plain-featured woman I sat next to...was conducting a dozen love-affairs?" we can see that Poor Harold is fulled with bitterness.
So the final Answer is:
Bitterness
<h3>hes right it's <em>D. Threatening</em> just got it right on APEX.... </h3>
The correct way of matching each statement with the appropriate tone is the following:
* Angry tone: the adjective “annoying” implies the angry tone of the speaker. (A cell phone can be annoying when you forget to turn on the silent feature before going to sleep)
* Accepting tone: the speaker acknowledges the problem with the battery, yet she/he accepts it by carrying a charger as a solution to it. (The problem is that the battery doesn’t last long, but I don’t mind carrying a charger)
* Objective tone: the speaker is objective by stating only facts about the device. (The cell phone makes calling convenient from all possible locations)
* Sentimental tone: the verb “cherish”, and the noun “gift” imply the sentimental tone of the speaker. (I will always cherish my first cell phone because it was a gift from my dad)
* Optimistic tone: the speaker has an optimistic tone, as she/he speaks about a possible future development. (I think we can soon expect a technology that charges phones in seconds)
Elizabethan era! .. or some say jacobean times, either or really