The lines from this excerpt from Act II, Scene IV, of "Romeo and Juliet", by William Shakespeare, that reveal that Mercutio thinks Romeo would be better off if he stopped thinking about love are:
"Why, is not this better now than groaning for love?
...to hide his bauble in a hole.
"
Mercutio is saying that when Romeo is joking with his friends he is his true self, and he is better off than when he is groaning for love because when he is in love he acts like an idiot.
Cassius asks Pindarus to kill him with his own sword; Brutus runs onto his own sword, which is held by Strato.
To educate and have a career when u become elder
although of the hard work and efforts
Answer:
It shows that the doctor did not usually supervise the nurses closely.
Explanation:
In this passage, Nellie Bly develops the idea that the treatment of patients at Blackwell's Island was terrible. We know this because of the details provided in the text. We know that when the commissioner visited, the doctor made the rounds with him. They noticed that half the nurses were gone, which shows that he did not usually supervise the nurses closely. Because of this, it is likely that the patients did not receive the care they were meant to receive.