answersLogoWhite

0


Want this question answered?

Be notified when an answer is posted

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What scenes lends itself most readily to music in the crucible?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Continue Learning about Performing Arts

What is jewelry casting?

involves pouring molten metal into a mold. This process lends itself more readily to mass production of the jewelry


Who is the antagonist of a midsummer's night dream?

For that matter, who is the protagonist of A Midsummer Night's Dream? Oberon? Bottom? Lysander? Hermia? It is not a play which lends itself to analysis using the protagonist/antagonist paradigm. The best answer is simply that there is no single Protagonist or Antagonist in the play. In every scene, different characters balance and contrast with each other.


Where do Romeo and Juliet get the power and means to meet?

nothing except if they got their parents to stop fighting


Who has the best snipers Army or Marines?

The US Navy SEALs likely have the best "standard" sniper program with both the best equipment and a relatively long and very intense initial course. Also, NAVSPECWAR (SEALs) tends NOT to be tied to a doctrinal use of snipers allowing them significant flexibility in their training program. This also lends itself to quick transformation of their training and rapid application of combat lessons-learned. This quick flexibility in their program makes for likely better trained personnel. Once personnel are "sniper qualified", the NAVSPECWAR personnel have significant shooting/training opportunities to keep currency and improve upon their skills unlike some service's personnel, including other SOCOM assets. Of course, this can be argued by the other services (Army, SOCOM, & USMC). There are also Tier-1 and Other Government Agency (OGA) military sniper programs which are specific to anti-terrorism units and they get the best training and equipment in the world, but are not necessarily a reflection of the service's normal sniper production pipeline.


What is a good analysis of Shakespeare's Sonnet 55 especially the theme language usage and metaphorical references?

Analysis Shakespeare's Sonnet 55 deals with the idea that the subject will be made immortal in these verses, though everything else will be lost through war, "sluttish" time, or other violent forces. Shakespeare elevates poetry as superior, and the only assurance of immortality in this world, but lowers this particular sonnet itself as being unworthy of his subject. Thus, his theme is that everything will be destroyed and forgotten except the subject, who will be praised forever, because they are immortalized in these lines. The first stanza talks about how time will not destroy the subject, though it shall destroy the world's most magnificent structures. Thus, poetry is stronger than these structures. The second stanza says that war will not destroy the subject; the third states that the subject will forever be remembered and honored. The couplet sums this up, and also suggests that the subject is love itself. Thus, the thesis of this sonnet is that the subject will be honored forever in the verses, though the verses themselves are unworthy of them. At the very beginning, Shakespeare suggests that his sonnet is magnificent by using very magnificent comparisons in lines 1-2:Not marble, nor the gilded monuments ,Of princes, shall outlive this powerful rhyme; In contrast, he uses the word "rhyme" at the end of line 2, which is often used to signify common and mediocre, even bad, poetry, which suggests that it is the subject of his sonnet that lends magnificence to the verses. This is only confirmed in lines 3-4:But you shall shine more bright in these contentsThan unswept stone, besmeared with sluttish time. Shakespeare comments that his subject will be brighter in his sonnet than an old and dirty stone, again suggesting, by equating his poem with dirt, that his sonnet does not live up to the subject. He likewise calls Time "sluttish", clearly comparing it unfavourably to his female subject. Also, the reference to stone recalls the structures alluded to in line 1. Lines 5-6 (a new stanza) begins a new idea:When wasteful war shall statues overturnAnd broils root out the work of masonry, Shakespeare has so far spoken of two destructive forces: time and war. He is here describing war destroying stone structures, which relates back to the "marble" and "gilded monuments" in line 1, that likewise do not last. Lines 7-8 continue the war theme:Nor Mars his sword nor war's quick fire shall burnThe living record of your memory. These lines talk of more war, and how it shall not destroy the poem. "Mars his sword" is a possessive, using the his genitive. "Living" contrasts with the destruction of the non-living structures in lines 1 and 5-6, meaning that the subject lends not only magnificence, but a living soul to these verses. The next stanza does not talk about survival, but of human appreciation. He continues to praise his subject:'Gainst death and all-oblivious enmityShall you pace forth; your praise shall still find roomEven in the eyes of all posterityThat wear this world out to the ending doom. There is still a suggestion of survival, but survival of human appreciation, and not of the verse itself. "Doom" refers to Judgement Day, suggesting in the context of the rest of the poem that this poetic record of his subject will survive, and be praised, to the end of time. The slight deviation of the meter in the words "Even in" creates emphasis for this permanency. The ending couplet is a summary of the survival theme:So 'till the judgment that yourself arise,You live in this, and dwell in lovers' eyes. The couplet not only summarizes the rest of the sonnet, but also seems to contradict itself. "Judgement" goes with the talk of Judgement Day in the last stanza, and implies that the subject is alive and will be judged on that day, but "dwelling in lovers' eyes" suggests that the subject is love itself. Thus, Shakespeare seems to consider the subject so lovely that he is a personification of Love, which cannot be conquered and to which no poetry can do justice.

Related questions

What is jewelry casting?

involves pouring molten metal into a mold. This process lends itself more readily to mass production of the jewelry


What is one reason Thomas Paine believes that the youth of the colonies is an advantage over Britain?

Because as a young nation, the colonies have less to lose


How does censorship lend itself to an utopian society?

I don't think censorship lends itself at all to a utopian society. A perfect society would have a free exchange of ideas, therefore I would say that censorship lends itself to a dystopian society.


Which of the following characteristic of prose as opposed to verse?

Prose is written in sentences and paragraphs, while verse is written in lines and stanzas. Verse typically follows a specific rhythm or meter, while prose does not adhere to a specific structure. prose is more conversational and closer to everyday speech, while verse often has a more formal or poetic tone.


A trait that lends itself for survival in one generation and therefore is seen in the next generation is said to?

Conserved.


What is a bridge deck?

is a cost effective, lightweight, modular deck system that lends itself to rapid construction


What are the best ways to combat racism?

Compassionately educate as many people you come into contact with, when the moment lends itself.


What is one reason Thomas Paine believes that the youth of the colonies is an advantage?

Because their youth lends itself to vigor and unity.


What is so great about Porsche?

The question is not one that lends itself to a simple answer, but Porsche is one of the most respected names in luxury cars.


Why do photographers choose to photograph fine art nudes?

Because the human body is beautiful and unceasingly lends itself to beautiful images.


Why do so many people say that Justin Bieber is a beaver?

Some people want to mock him, and his name lends itself to that specific nickname.


What is one reason thomas Paine believes that the youth of of the colonies is an advantage against Britain?

Because their youth lends itself to vigor and unity.