The correct option is this: MORE NEEDS SHE THE DIVINE THAN THE PHYSICIAN.
In the statement given above, 'The Divine refers to the Almighty God while 'the physician refers to the earthly, human doctor. What the speaker of this statement implies is that, it is only God that can heal Lady Macbeth of her disease, the earthly doctor can only do little for her in her condition. The sickness of Lady Macbeth is essentially of the mind and not of the body, so it is only God who can heal her and restore her health.
In her "Twenty Years ar Hull-House", Jane Addams describes her work with Ellen Starr, after she returned from the United States, after traveling several years; during that period she lived the poverty and suffering of needy people. During that period she also spent two years in London.
As we said at the beginning of the first paragraph, she and Ellen Starr founded Hull-House in the slums of Chicago, in January, 1889. The search for the ideal location was time consuming, and Hull-House was named after the home owner.
The rest of the book describes the activities of Addams and the people who lived at Hull-House and depended on it.
Answer: i think it the garden in the church yard
Explanation:
When we first meet Friar Laurence, he is out at dawn gathering herbs into a willow basket, as we see in the lines, "I must up-fill this osier cage of ours / With baleful weeds and precious-juiced flowers" (II. iii.
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You can do something like Adam and Eve. Genesis 2:4-3:24