<span>I would say A because experiments are test to get results you have to test. :)</span>
The correct answer to the question above is (b.) death. In Morte d'Arthur, the black hoods worn by the ladies who come to take King Arthur away on the barge are used to symbolize death.
In Act I Scene 5 lines 59-54, the ghost of King Hamlet tells his son that his uncle was the one that murdered him by pouring poison in his ear.
The literal meaning of this is that <u>Claudius poison his brother and King Hamlet. The poison was introduced to his body through his ear.</u> This is very interesting, especially because usually poison is given to a person in a drink, but Shakespeare was trying to say something beyond with this.
The symbolic meaning of this is connected with the fact that<u> words</u> (which we listen and enter our ears) <u>can also be like poison and they can actually kill us</u>. In fact, this is what happens to Prince Hamlet, the words uttered by the ghost of his father end up working like poison, they will force him to find revenge to the point in which he will find his own death.
Answer:
Please help me find this answer?
Answer:
this helps form the poem and lets other figures express things and helps tie the whole poem together
Explanation:
it is quite a good poem by the way :)