Answer: Portia could very easily teach Bassanio how to choose the right casket. What is the speaker referring to in these lines? Midas was a miserly king. Question 5. My eyes, my lord, can look as quickly as yours: You saw the mistress, I saw the maid; You loved, I loved, because a rest Doesnt pertain any more to me, my lord, than to you. Answer: She wants to love him dearly because she has paid heavy price for him. Question 4. Explain . resource to ask questions, find answers, and discuss thenovel. What has the speaker come to give and to receive? A. Bassanio turns to Portia to give and receive love. Answer: The passage tells us that some damage has been done to Antonio, His ships at sea are supposed to have been ruined. heart! Why does Portia think herself fortunate? How, and what risk Antonio helped Bassanio and at what risk? Answer: His financial position was worse than nothing. Shylock succeeds in making Antonio feel miserable because of his demand for a pound of Antonios flesh. Passage 11 (Act III, Sc.II, Lines 197-207). The most fortunate thing is that she is surrendering her humble self to the guidance and control of her husband. Then he found that when he attempted to eat, his food was at once turned to gold. The fact that the lark rises from the "sullen earth" at "break of day" implies that the day is much happier than the night; day break is compared to the dawning of a thought of the beloved. When a ship captain dies, it is a tragedy, because he is the leader of the boat, just as Lincoln was the leader of the country. People on a boat are happy to be returning home from . Celine asks her professor if she can give a speech on "friends with benefits." is a world with a new better start; freedom and equality not hatred and violence, isolation, confusion, disappointment, frustration; hopeful at the last stanza, uses 'and' , no comas, lists of words of everyday things, gathering and persuading their people and others to fight for their freedom, powerful, persuasive, repetition of 'For my people'. Answer: Gratiano had been quick in wooing the maid while his master was busy in going through the fonnalities of choosing the casket. Then he found that when he attempted to eat, his food was at once turned to gold. My Captain!" by Walt Whitman, the speaker is referring to Abraham Lincoln who has tragically died. "Shakespeares Sonnets Sonnet 29 - When in disgrace with fortune and mens eyes Summary and Analysis". It is a poem of both loss and celebration as their leader died but they won by the end of the civil war. Jack and Jill are owners of UpAHill, an S corporation. By note : according to this instruction, contending in a prize : the simile is that of two wrestlers, or similar athletes, competing for a prize. He would have leave Belmont immediately. How is Portia unambitious in her wishes for herself? , endship. But the full sum of me Is the sum of something which, in general, is an unlessoned girl, unschooled, unpracticed; Happy in this state, she is not too old To learn; Account : estimation, livings : property; possessions, exceed account : surpass all reckoning, but the full sum of me, is sum of nothing : but the sum total of all my virtues amounts actually to nothing at all. CashInventoriesLandEquipmentJordan$60,00080,0000100,000ONeal$50,0000130,0000. Answer: According to Bassanio, the painter should have lost both of his own eyes and thus have been unable to complete the eyes in his painting. Answer: Yes, it really goes hard with Antonio for a time. Sonnet 104 is a sonnet. a poem that has fourteen lines and uses any of a number of formal rhyme schemes, in English. What is the source of her satisfaction at this stage? life's simple pleasures. c. Opening with the main idea. Sonnet 73 takes up one of the most pressing issues of the first 126 sonnets, the speaker's anxieties regarding what he perceives to be his advanced age, and develops the theme through a sequence of metaphors each implying something different. In religion, What damned error is there that some sober face Will bless it, and approve it with a text, Hiding the grossness with a beautiful ornament? In case of such a failure she would have entertained such a sinful wish. He walked into his new classroom.A girl came up to him and said, ",begin underline,Your cheeks are li Answer: She transfers ail these things to Bassanio with a ring. Whom does he address as your lordship? The first quatrain, which employs the metaphor of the winter day, emphasizes the harshness . He was happy to have a new friend.QuestionWhat is the meaning of "Your cheeks are like roses" as it is used in the passage?Answer options with 4 options1. Celine's professor did not realize that Celine was using a(n) ______________ to make the topic sounds less explicit. She accepts Bassanio, the man much after her heart, as her husband and places herself and all that she possesses at his disposal, Passage 10 (Act III, Sc.II, Lines 156-174). What is the sin referred to in the extract? She takes a promise from him not that Bassanio will part with this, lose it or give it to anybody. State in your own words how the fortune of the Bassanio changes after he wins the prize. The "Daily Show" correspondent Roy Wood Jr., seemingly spared no-one in his roasts during Saturday's White House Correspondents' Dinner. Examiners are encouraged. Question 2. Question 2. He then springs a surprise by expressing his wish to , get (married. In what way Portia sums up her qualities? "It's okay," said the girl. Answer: After choosing the right casket, Bassanio comes forward to claim beautiful Portia as his future wife. There were the doubts of success and the feelings of hopelessness which made her tremble with fear of a possible failure. He is not sure whether the cheers of the audience are meant for him or his rival. Walt Whitman: Poems "I Hear America Singing" Summary - GradeSaver Midas was very avaricious and asked that whatever he touched might turn to gold. What literary elements are used in Edgar Allan Poe's poem "Annabel Lee"? Answer: The fortune of both Bassanio and Gratiano depended upon the right choice of the casket. Broadway's Longest-Running Musical Turns Out the Lights Passage 7 (Act III, Sc.II, Lines 124-138), BASSANIO : but her eyes! Question 3. He was not led by appearance. merchant-marring rocks : rocks, which ruin merchant by wrecking their ships. Upon supposed fairness : upon the head of a lady who has a reputation for beauty, undeserved because the hair is not really her own, but has been cut from the head of some other person who is now dead and in the grave, dowry : possession, guiled : a shore which is dangerous to shipping, he beauteous scarf Veiling an Indian beauty : thought of the negroes of the West Indies as Indians. PORTIA : I would keep you here for a month or two Before you gamble for me. It shows how America is a war zone that takes strength from people and causes them unnecessary stress. From her cautious confessions and nervous style, we can surely conclude that she is passionately in love with the handsome suitor. Question 5. Fox News Fires Its Biggest Star - The New York Times Question 1. She says that the total value of all her qualities is very little. Go, Hercules! My father does not feel my arm, he has no pulse nor will; Which statement best describes the significance of comparing Lincoln's death to the death of a captain on his ship in "O Captain! Answer: These lines are spoken by Gratiano and he addressed to Bassanio, whom he calls your lordship. Never did I know A creature that was shaped like a man, So eager and greedy to destroy a man completely. What was Bassanios actual financial position according to his own confession? 3. In line 7, he envies the artistic talent of one man, and the opportunities afforded someone else. Read these lines from Whitman's "O Captain! What is Portias anxiety? Why is the speaker doubtful whether what he sees is true? See answers Advertisement rebecca6853 With noble courage and grace she speaks openly of that which any woman less sincere or less wise would have tried to pass over. Here are a few of the most unpleasant words That were ever written on paper.