Appreciation would always be present regardless of the fact
that Prospero’s treatment of Caliban changed.
Because of Prospero’s initial kindness toward Caliban, an appreciation
was there. Again, even if the treatment
changed, that appreciation of initial kindness would never be changed to
resentment. Further, even if it were
possible for Caliban to be more appreciative, what would really have had to
change were the actions, not the feelings (which is what appreciation is—a feeling). Perhaps if Caliban had done more to show his
appreciation, Prospero’s treatment of Caliban would not have changed to
harshness.
A because he was unsure about killing. He had these 2 ideas in his mind before killing the king. He wanted to not kill because the king was his bestfriend, but then he also wanted the power to be king himself. He was soft on one side, while the other side was greedy and wanted power.
Hope this helped
If anything the best answer would possibly work in this case would be *Slid*