Answer:
to show the fight for independence is a spirtual stuggle
Explanation:
i think so
The opening scene of the play introduces the theme of the play and lets the audience know what to expect. In this scene, the three Weird Sisters are conjuring. Immediately they let the audience know that they will appear again in the play. ("When shall we three meet again"......."There to meet with Macbeth").
Teotihuacan and the Avenue of the Dead were built by the unknown. Nobody really knows who built these places.
“wasted
limbs”-the author might wanted to say that when you are dead you do not need
your legs or arms any more. You used to walk somewhere or to hug somebody, but
it was in the past. It does not matter now.
“Rugged stones”—you
had a lot of problems, you solved them. You did a lot of things in your life,
sometimes it was difficult.
<span>“hungry
wolves”-after your death your relatives or friends do not respect you any more. They may say bad things about you.</span>
<span>“burning
sun”-if the sun is so bright and you
stay outside for a long time, it becomes not so pleasant and warm, as it
was before</span>
These two examples of how the gods intervene in the lives of humans come from Book 1 of <em>The Iliad</em>.
The first example is that of Apollo. When Agamemnon takes Chryseis, a beautiful maiden, for himself, her father asks for her back. He even offers to pay a significant amount for her, but Agamemnon refuses. Chryseis's father asks the god Apollo for help, and Apollo decides to send a plague to the Greek camp, which leads to the death of many soldiers.
Another example is that of goddess Athena. When Agamemnon sees that he might be deprived of a woman, he asks Achilles to give him his own, a maiden named Briseis. This causes Achilles to become extremely angry, and he even considers killing Agamemnon. However, in order to defuse the situation, the goddess Athena intervenes and succeeds in preventing the duel.