The answer is c Ferdinand and Miranda
Rainer Maria Rilke was one of the most known and respected poets of the <em>XIX century</em>.
For him the women symbolized many things, he saw them as <em>¨purer and humanistic¨</em> beings, with different positive aspects to remark and high light in an era where the women´s authority and figure were strongly debilitated.
This male chauvinist society behavior practically obliged the women to adapt to it, sometimes having to leave their ¨essence¨ in aside, and start to act in a more<em> ¨manly way¨</em>, without mentioning that normally the duties designed to women were considered not important or influent (housewife´s as an example).
Rilke´s was against this situation and highlighted the women's capacity to perform any task effectively, without having to copy or perform it the same way of a male, sustained their capacity to proceed properly before any situation, and basically saw the women as something unique, useful, necessary.
In different poems, he describes and highlights the women's qualities and ways to perform different duties in an effective and captivating way, having the capacity to influence completely their surroundings.
Answer:
i think the second not for sure but i think the second
Explanation:
the answer is C you can argue both about that
Answer:
B). They are similar because both are about love for a woman others may find lacking.
Explanation:
The key similarity between the given lines from 'Sonnet 130' and 'Sonnet 131' of William Shakespeare is that 'they both talk about the love for a lady who other people may find incomplete or lacking.' In both the sonnets, <u>the speaker talks about love beyond physical appearance and beauty and breaks the stereotypes of associating the beloved with beauty('most precious jewel' and 'false compare')</u>. Shakespeare primarily aims to offer a different representation of love in order to break away from the traditional perspective of love and beloved. Thus, <u>option B</u> is the correct answer.