Answer:
D. And even now, /to crown my thoughts with acts, be it thought and done.
Explanation:
William Shakespeare's <em>Macbeth</em><em> </em>revolves around the life of Macbeth and his rise to power courtesy of the three witches' prophecy of his supremacy in the kingdom. And in this zeal to achieve his intended power of being king, he did numerable murderous deeds just to get to the top, which also led to his downfall.
As seen in the speech of Macbeth in Act IV scene i, he seems greatly disturbed at the prophecy of the three witches and demanded they tell him more. But then when he got the warning that Macduff is getting away, he decided to immediately pursue the man and kill him. He decided that instead of being indecisive, he will act instantly on any occasion so as to achieve his aim and mot give it a second thought. And this is perfectly supported in the line <em>"and even now,/ to crown my thoughts with acts,/ be it thought and done". </em>
Answer:
I do. My grades are fairly decent.
Answer:
C) Climax.
Explanation:
In any story-line, the plot structure will consist of numerous stages which, according to Gustav Freytag, are in five stages. The first is the introduction/ exposition, followed by the rising action, climax, falling action, and finally the conclusion. Through these five stages, we can easily understand the structure of any plot.
In the given excerpt from Franz Kafka's "The Metamorphosis", the two passages create the climax of the whole plot. The climax is when the whole story's main structure came to its highest point, the turning point where the fate of the character(s) or the plot structure depends.
This stage presents the middle ground which will decide how the fates will change. Likewise, the given passage contains the family of Gregor deciding what to do with him. This scene contains the decision of the family "to try and get rid of it", it being Gregor who has been changed to a bug. This presents a conflict in the story where the fate of Gregor was decided and thus, change his life forever.
Answer:
They warn the reader not to believe everything Rachel says.
Describing the event from the third person point of view