Why does Lord Shamash urge Gilgamesh to humbaba? which features of epic poetry does this passage show? check all that apply..
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Lord Capulet: “Death is my son-in-law, Death is my heir; / My daughter he hath wedded: I will die, / And leave him all; life, living, all is Death’s.” *Since Juliet is “dead,” Lord Capulet will not have Paris as a son-in-law. He will instead have to settle with death. *Cordial means medicine.
meaning-this means that Lord Capulet has lost something very valuable part of his life. he also says that Juliet has left him in grief and misery and without her he shall die too.
Example #8. “Death is my son-in-law; Death is my heir.” In this tragic verse, Capulet uses the metaphors of son-in-law and heir to emphasize how the specter of death incessantly haunts him and his loved ones.
What literary element is revealed when Friar Lawrence asks if the bride (Juliet) is ready to go to church? Death because he says Death laid with Juliet and is now her husband, which makes Death Capulet’s son-in-law and heir.
He says her death is unfair for someone so young and beautiful, like a strange, unseasonable frost killing the most beautiful flower in a field.
Personification: Personification is a type of figurative language used often by writers. This is when an inanimate object or idea is given human qualities.
She grieves over Juliet’s death. How does the Friar try to comfort Juliet’s parents? Summarize briefly his arguments in lines 65-83. He says that Juliet is now in a better place in heaven and that the parents should be happy.
Her blood is settled and her joints are stiff. Life and these lips have long been separated. Death lies on her like an untimely frost upon the sweetest flower of the field.” CAPULET: Death, that hath ta’en her hence to make me wail, ties up my tongue and will not let me speak.
Lord Capulet says this line–Act 4 scene v, lines 62-64. He is speaking in the company of the Friar, Paris, and other family members.
Thus I enforce thy rotten jaws to open, And, in despite, I’ll cram thee with more food! He states that the “detestable maw” (meaning mouth) has eaten the most beautiful woman in the world and yet he must open its mouth once more to feed it again—this time of course it will feed on Romeo.
Lady Capulet uses an extended metaphor to describe Paris as a beautiful book of love.
Romeo begins by using the sun as a metaphor for his beloved Juliet: “It is the east, and Juliet is the sun. In these same lines Romeo has furthered his metaphor by using personification. He creates for us the idea that the moon is a woman who is “sick and pale with grief,” seemingly jealous of Juliet’s beauty.
How does Lord Capulet personify death? Lord Capulet personifies death when he says, “Death is my Son-in-law, Death is my heir;My daughter he hath wedded.” He personifies death by saying that death has married her daughter on her wedding day, not Paris, who was supposed to be his son-in-law.
Lord Capulet has two outbursts in this scene that reveal the depths of his grief over the (supposed) death of his daughter. In the first, he personifies (gives human traits to) death by calling it his “son-in-law” and saying to Paris that death has married Juliet before he could. Lord…
Lord Capulet describes his daughter’s death as a kind of awful mistake wherein Romeo’s dagger has become somehow sheathed, by its own volition, in her bosom rather than in his scabbard. Capulet says to Lady Capulet, … And it mis-sheathed in my daughter’s bosom (5.3. 210–213).
In Act IV, Scene V : How does Lord Capulet’s reaction to Juliet’s “death” differ from his earlier treatment of her? Now he sees how she would die rather than marry and he is sad that he pushed her.
How does Lord Capulet personify death in lines 34-40? He says everything, his life, his possessions, and everything else of his belongs to death. … Though it’s natural to cry, common sense tells us to be happy for the dead.
The three major causes of Romeo and Juliet’s deaths were bad choices, adult interference, and bad luck. One cause of Romeo and Juliet’s death was the bad choices they both made. One example of a bad choice in Act II, scene iv is that Romeo and Juliet get married one day after they meet.
What does Friar Laurence find when he enters the tomb? Romeo’s dead body and Juliet waking from her potion.
What is Romeo’s mood at the beginning of this scene? He is happy because he dreamt he was dead and Juliet’s kiss revived him.
Romeo says to Tybalt: “I do protest I never injured thee,/ But love thee better than thou canst devise,/ Till thou shalt know the reason of my love,/ And so, good Capulet – which name I tender/ As dearly as mine own – be satisfied.” … The reader knows why Romeo will not fight Tybalt but Tybalt doesn’t understand.
They are preparing for Juliet and Paris’ wedding. … What does Friar Laurence say to comfort the Capulet family? He tells them that she is now in heaven. He refers to it as “paradise.”
He might want to kill Juliet because it is against the law to marry two men and he would be the one that would have to marry Juliet with two different people. The purpose for this scene is that it is an example of comic relief.
How does Juliet explain her obedience to her parents? … How do Juliet’s Nurse and parents react to her “death”? He says they should be joyous that she has returned to heaven, but he deems their grief as being selfish. How does Friar Laurence try to comfort them?
1 occurring before the expected, normal, or proper time.
Capulet replies, “Ready to go, but never to return” (4.5. 34). This bitter irony means that as a bride Juliet would have gone to church for the wedding and returned a wife, but as a corpse she will go to church for the funeral and then be buried.
Here Lord Capulet uses a simile to compare young Juliet’s apparent death to that of a beautiful flower killed by an early winter frost.
meaning-this means that Lord Capulet has lost something very valuable part of his life. he also says that Juliet has left him in grief and misery and without her he shall die too.
Lord Capulet: “Death is my son-in-law, Death is my heir; / My daughter he hath wedded: I will die, / And leave him all; life, living, all is Death’s.” *Since Juliet is “dead,” Lord Capulet will not have Paris as a son-in-law. He will instead have to settle with death.
Her father means that she is inexperienced, which she is, but Juliet is also a “stranger in the world” because she prefers the transcendent experience she shares with Romeo to the compromises and practicalities of everyday life, even to the extent of choosing to die rather than live in a world without Romeo.
QuestionAnswer”You detestable stomach. You womb of death. You are gorged with the dearest morsel on earth. So I’ll force your rotten jaws to open, and to spite you, I’ll cram you with more food!”Romeo to the tomb/crypt that Juliet is in
I will apprehend him. (to ROMEO) Stop thy unhallowed toil, vile Montague! Can vengeance be pursued further than death? … Obey and go with me, for thou must die.
What’s here? A cup, closed in my true love’s hand? … It’s a cup, closed in my true love’s hand? Poison, I see, has been the cause of his death.
6. Lady Capulet describes Paris’s face as a precious book of love. Paris is “valiant, a man of wax, a flower.” Lady Capulet and Nurse describe Paris in terms of his physical appearance and his strong character.
Capulet says he thinks his daughter will listen to him, then corrects himself and states that he is sure Juliet will abide by his decision. He promises Paris that the wedding will be held on Wednesday, then stops suddenly and asks what day it is.
Why do you think the love scene in Capulet’s garden is the most famous in all of literature? … He would rather die than leave Verona because there is nothing outside there for him (and no Juliet).
In shocked disbelief, he asks Romeo “Why the devil / came you between us? I was hurt under your arm.” Romeo blames himself for Mercutio’s death because he placed his love for Juliet before consideration of his friend. Romeo thus attacks Tybalt to assuage his guilt.
Lord Capulet personifies death, referring to it as if it was a person, Juliet’s bridegroom. Only Friar Laurence knows the truth; he plays along and tells the Capulets to be glad that their daughter is in heaven and to prepare her body for the funeral.
Lord Capulet refers to the untimeliness of her death when he states, “Death lies on her like an untimely frost.” This metaphor alludes to the fact that when the frost season arrives too soon, the crops die.