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.
Ozymandias- he thinks of himself as the big shot. He boasts about his work(look upon my works and ur might despair). Ozymandias has this aroma of arrogance on his pedestal he proclaims to be the (king of kings) and warns other rulers or his enemies to be sad-(despair).
He thought that the statue and his work will forever immortalise him and he shall be the king of kings but now it's all just a (colossal wreck) all the power he might have once had, all his accomplishments are now (lone and level) - this suggests that he is no longer a feared ruler but just a pile of rubble in the middle of nowhere.
The whole poem it self is mocking ozymandias that his work is no longer there his is no longer the King of kings.
The answer is C. The heartbreak of unrequited love is akin to death.
Answer:
sorry but I don't know the answer and I'm in a hurry to get points so that I can ask some questions from anyone so really sorry for this
Explanation: