Brutus and Cassius go into Brutus' tent to argue instead of staying out in the open probably for fear of being heard by someone. They are arguing about Caesar's murder, among other things, and they may not want to be discovered.
The author of Passage 1 would most likely criticize the author of Passage 2 forD) underestimating the consequences of technological issues
<h3>What is a Literary Criticism?</h3>
This refers to the act of judging or making comments about a thing, usually in a disparaging manner.
Hence, we can see that based on the complete information, there is the narration by two authors in different passages as they talk about the effects of globalization and technology.
The 2nd author understates the effects of tech issues, which the first author would likely criticize him for.
Read more about literary criticisms here:
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I believe the correct answer is: the claim of a human tyrant
of enduring glory is transient.
The theme of "Ozymandias", a poem written by Percy
B. Shelly, can be said to be that the claim of a human tyrant of enduring glory
is transient. This theme may be even broader, meaning that everything humans accomplish
is transient such as Ozymandias’ glory in this poem.
Answer:
Nathaniel Hawthorne “The Birthmark"
"If the birthmark is explicitly a “symbol of imperfection” (par.9)," it is a psychological imperfection especially on the part of Aylmer.
He saw a lovely lady, Georgiana and married her. After the marriage, he then noticed that she had a "birthmark" that reduced or diminished her perfect beauty. This shows that Aylmer, the acclaimed scientist was himself very imperfect in his evaluations. He was attracted to beauty. The attraction blinded him to discover the facial "birthmark." When the attraction faded, he worked himself up to ensure that the "birthmark" was removed, not caring that the "birthmark" was part of who Georgiana was.
One can also say that the imperfection reflected the sexual prejudices that women face in the hands of their husbands. And this raises the question: why do men desire women? Is it for their beauty or for their sexual prowess or is for satisfying their sexual urges? The warning is that one cannot make love to somebody one does not love in totality, otherwise, sexual relationship is reduced to depraved sensuality, that is below what we have come to know about some animals. Love-making is a sharing of the the most intimate of ourselves. A man who rapes a woman has raped himself, and is far less than a man.
Explanation:
"The Birthmark" was a short story by Nathaniel Hawthorne written in 1843, which puts to question the love men profess to their wives. Is it a love that enlivens or a love that annihilates the "beloved?"
The author might compare "the awkward waddling walk of a swam to the torture of life that humans life on this planet". This might be considered a metaphor for the "release of death and the grace" in comparison to life itself. The reader might perceive that life is awkward and death is sweet. So it could be said that the theme of the poem might be "the release of the burden of life in death".