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Paris is generally portrayed as sympathetic towards Juliet in Shakespeare's "Romeo and Juliet." He genuinely cares for her well-being and wants to marry her to provide her with stability and security. However, Juliet's love for Romeo and her unwillingness to marry Paris creates tension between them.
He was sympathetic towards the homeless person. He did not feel sympathetic towards the girl who did not study and failed the test. She wanted to be sympathetic, but she just couldn't when she learned what really happened.
writer's attitude towards amalkanti is of sympathetic pity.
He was kind and sympathetic towards me. That's why I loved him.
I felt sympathetic towards the starving children in Africa.
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Shakespeare's portrayal of the murder of King Duncan in Macbeth would have likely shocked and unsettled the audience due to the brutal and treacherous nature of the act. The audience may have felt a mix of horror, pity, and perhaps even some understanding towards Macbeth's motivations. This pivotal scene would have created a sense of tension and moral ambiguity, challenging the audience to reflect on the consequences of ambition and power.
Unless some other factor (e.g., a bear trying to attack you) activates your sympathetic nervous system, the parasympathetic, not the sympathetic, nervous system is active after eating. Parasympathetic activation results in a decline of the stress hormones epinephrine and norepinephrine, which allows blood to be directed towards the digestive system so that digestion and absorption of nutrients can occur. When the sympathetic nervous system is activated, blood is diverted from the "non-essential" organs, such as the digestive system, and towards the heart, brain, and muscles.
relating to early raked stages - whereas to move "up" the rake or away from the audience or "down" the stage towards the audience
In Act 3, Scene 4 of "Twelfth Night," the characters seem to talk to the audience through their asides and soliloquies. For example, Malvolio's soliloquy about Olivia's supposed love for him reveals his inner thoughts to the audience, while also giving insight into his character. Additionally, characters like Feste and Maria make witty remarks and puns that can be interpreted as speaking directly to the audience.
Often she was if not outstandingly kind, at least sympathetic towards those who respected and honored her in mythology, if one did not spurn or dismiss her, she was not the sort of goddess who would punish without cause.
If I remember correctly It is the Harvard Young Christian assiociation, hardly an audience impartial towards any argument for the justification of faith