Answer:
Quincunx
<em>Hope this helped!</em>
Answer:
William Shakespeare doesn't have one specific feeling for love. In his plays, he thinks that love can be unfair, confusing, crazy, unpredictable, and uncontrollable. The classic romance that everyone thinks about in Romeo and Juliet. Married life, as Shakespeare habitually represents it, is the counterpart, mutatis mutandis, of his representation of unmarried lovers. His husbands and wives have less of youthful abandon; they rarely speak of love, and still more rarely with lyric ardor, or coruscations of poetic wit.
Explanation:
I am very confused about what you are asking
I dont know quit how to describe it but they would feel the same things that he feels when he sings the song