Answer:
"their stolen marriage-day”
“For whom, and not for Tybalt, Juliet pin’d”
“for it wrought on her / The form of death”
Explanation:
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Answer:
B: their stolen marriage-day
D: For whom, and not for Tybalt, Juliet pin’d
E: for it wrought on her / The form of death
Explanation:
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b. The object can be a noun or a verb.
c. The predicate can be a noun or a verb.
d. Often the subject will act upon the object.
a.
resort to tough policing measures to prove her strength
b.
avoid crowds for fear of assassination
c.
reduce taxes to quell dissent
d.
reassure the people that they will be protected
Answer: The right answer is the B) Avoid crowds for fear of assassination.
Explanation: Just to elaborate a little on the answer, it can be added that Queen Elizabeth delivered this famous speech to her troops at Tilbury Camp in the summer of 1588 in response to calls for avoiding armed multitudes in anticipation of a possible Spanish invasion. In it, she asserted her strength as a female monarch and her trust in her subjects, claiming that she would always live among them, not hidden in order to avoid a possible assault.
B. The country is better than the city.
C. Life is fleeting.
D. Beauty is only skin-deep.
Kabir has a way of confirming his own confusion about death and life. It is clear that the "the terror of death" is his concern. While he ponders on such questions he images his freedom in the swan.
Hence, "bee of the heart" which makes him desire anything else no more than the eternal himself. He, is reference to "him in I".
Kabir was a 15th century poet. The poet belongs to Bhakti movement which introduced many saint-mystic poet to in Indian sub-continent. He like other Bhakti poets believed in one true god, who did not have a form or a even a name. He wrote in Hindi, while borrowed a great deal from Avdhi, Braj.
Death here, refers to the state of perpetual suffering as opposed to the land the swan flies off too. The land is free and there is "no desire for joy".
The swan here specifically symbolizes his own desire of freeing away from the clutches of not only death rather aging too.
This is evident in the lines,
"There is a land where no doubt nor sorrow have rule:"
The poet hence wants to know the place where the free "swan" flies off too.
Hence, option C is correct.
To learn more about Kabir here
https://brainly.in/question/32816350
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