The final stanza of "A Poem for Mrs. Long, My Librarian" indicates that books gave the speaker comfort and hope during her childhood. Just before this stanza, the reader states that her everyday life is fine, but in this stanza, she informs the reader that books still provided an escape to somewhere more magical than her own world. In the final line, the speaker discusses how her librarian, and the books she shared, were a source of "Spring"(hope) for her.
Selection two sounds best as it mentions that anything is possible.
In Act V, scene III of Romeo and Juliet, Paris represents an outside pressure that escalates a conflict because Paris wants to wed Juliet, but before they get to meet each other Juliet falls for Romeo. They get secretly married by Friar Laurence.
Her parents want her to marry Paris, he goes to ask to the same Friar to marry him with Juliet.
I think it would be a- calmed
that there were stuff that weir going on that this was not going to end