Shakespeare puts little and fleeting value on human relationships in the sonnet.
Explanation:
The sonnet 29 begins with these lines:
<em>When, in disgrace with fortune and men’s eyes,
</em>
<em>I alone beweep.</em>
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These lines show him alone and lonely and in want of comfort but he is also saying here that he does not see human relationships as permanent.
He then develops this theme throughout and when the muse himself is mentioned in the poem, the poet only ascribes value to him and nothing else.
Everything else can go on in passing as long as he has his beloved to love and to keep him there and sane.
The answer you are looking for is <span>C. It resolves the conflict over whether Creon will realize his own flaws; it does so by showing that he realizes his pride, not Eurydice's curse, is to blame for his family's deaths because him admiting he was wrong and taking the blame shows that he realizes his own flaws</span>
Where is the book or the chapter
If you mean an adverb clause, I'd say your answer is D. Adverb clauses typically begin with a subordinating conjunction like because, after, if, or although.
The last one
Genes are taken from bacteria, and those genes are inserted into corn