<span>The Censors" follows a yoiung adult male, Juan, in a tragic and ironic quest to send a letter to a girl he met in Paris. He writes her a letter, and sends it. However, he knows the government censors anything and everything they can; newspapers, art, and most importantly to Juan, letters. He knows that if his letter has a shot at getting to his beloved Mariana, he has to take aciton. As such, he joins the Censorship Division of his local post office. He progresses quickly, and becomes obsessed with his job. He reaches so high as to get to Section B, one of the highest and hardest hurdles for letters to pass over. And soon after being promoted to this prestigious position, he realizes his goal: he is delivered the very letter he wrote to Mariana. And he lets it pass, just as he had planned to. The next day he is executed by the very government for which he was serving.</span>
Answer: His son Hamlet died while he was writing Romeo & Juliet.
Explanation:
Answer:
depends on context.
Explanation:
Not sure if you are responding a passage or in general but usually it means that they feel alone or have somebody that is there for them mentally.
It relies on the readers ethics (what they believe is right or wrong)
Answer:
In the last stanza of 'Dover Beach', the speaker urges his ladylove to “be true to one another” as the new world, that seems to be so beautiful apparently, does not evoke much hope for him. To talk about the stylistic aspects of the poem, the lines are mostly rhyming