Act 2 talks about the marriage of both of them.
<u>Explanation:</u>
May the heavens be happy with this holy act of marriage, so nothing unfortunate happens later to make us regret it. Be that as it may, whatever incidents happen, they can't destroy the delight I feel with one look at her. You should simply get our hands together with sacred words, at that point love-crushing death can do whatever it satisfies.
Marriage is as long as possible, you see. "These brutal pleasures have rough finishes," he cautions. Shockingly, it goes in one ear and out the other. Monk Laurence takes them off to wed them so they can proceed onward to the exceptionally foreseen wedding trip stage.
<span> The ramifications of the assassination led to the </span>Liberators' civil war<span> and, ultimately, to the </span>Principate<span> period of the </span>Roman Empire<span>.
Hope this helps. :)</span>
A ( first stanza )
B ( second stanza )
C ( Third Stanza )
B ( Fourth stanza )
This is your rhyme scheme... The second and the fourth one rhyme so they are both B and A does not rhyme with any neither does C.
If you can I would be very grateful if you put me as brainliest and give me a big thanks!
2.) Idiom
3.) The author’s use of language indicates the person is cheerful.
Think of the idiom “on cloud nine”, which is similar to this one, both meaning a person is delighted