Iago hates Othello for some of reasons. First reason could be that Othello promoted Cassio in his place; however, Iago wants it and he cosidered himself more superior than Cassio for that possition but when Othello promoted Cassio instead of Iago neglecting Iago's calibre. Hate for othello increases in Iago's heart. Secondly, Iago's thinks that othello has illegal relationship with her wife. Also, Iago hates him because Othello married Desdemona. Othello got the wife and according Iago Othello is not capable for such a beautiful and caring wife like.., Desdemona. He also hates him due to the differences in their race. Iago hates othello but the revenge he took is quite inappropriate. In his hate, he ruined the life of a married couple.
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Friday, March 18, 2016
Thursday, March 17, 2016
What strengths do management bring to the business?Management .who are they? How do they help the business?
Managers in a business have the responsibility for the
overall performance of the business. To meet this responsibility, managers set
objectives of the firm, determine its strategy, arranges for the resources required in
line with the strategy, and plan and direct the activities of the business for effective
utilization in meeting objectives of the business. In this way management plays a very
important role in performance and success of the
business.
Without managers to plan, organize, lead and
control the activities of the business the organizational resources will not be directed
that well toward business objectives, leading to inefficiencies and waste. In such
conditions the business will not be able to meet the competitive challenges and will be
forced to close down sooner of later.
Please explain and paraphrase "On The Life of Man," by Sir Walter Raleigh.
Here's the poem, in the original with, I believe, the
original title, with notes and source
included:
On the Life of
Man
Sir Walter Ralegh
What is our
life? a play of passion,
Our mirth the musicke of division,
Our
mothers wombes the tyring houses be,
When we are drest for this short Comedy,
Heaven the Judicious sharpe spector is, 5
That
sits and markes still who doth act amisse,
Our graves that hide us from the
searching Sun,
Are like drawne curtaynes when the play is done,
Thus march we playing to our latest rest,
Onely we dye in earnest,
that's no Jest.
[AJ Notes:
musicke of
division,, the entr'acte, the music that marked
the division
between acts.
tyring houses, on the Elizabethan stage, the 'tiring
house',
from "attiring house" was the room where the
actors
got dressed before a performance.
spector,
spectator, with a play on 'spectre'.
still, always, ever.
latest,
last.]
Source:
The Anchor Anthology of
Sixteenth-Century Verse.
Richard S. Sylvester, Ed.
Garden City, NY:
Anchor Press, 1974. 341.
The poem compares life to
participating in a play. In short, the speaker writes
that:
- our life=a play that's
passionate - our laughter=the music played between acts of
a play - our mother's wombs=the place where we get dressed
to prepare for the short life that is a comedy - heaven=a
sharp audience that corrects us when we behave
badly - graves=that which hides us from the heat of the sun
(life's difficulties?), and is like the drawing of a curtain when a play is
over - this is how we march toward our death, and death is
serious, not funny
Thus, life is a comedy, to
the speaker, but death is not. I'll leave it to you to draw the meanings from the
metaphors.
Why were God and the Sears Roebuck catalogue linked in Jeanne's mind in Farewell To Manzanar?
It doesn't really seem like God and the Sears catalog
ought to be linked in someone's mind, but they were for Jenne during her time at
Manzanar.
The reason why they were linked is that both of
them represented things that could not be gotten there at the camp. Both God and the
Sears catalog represented good stuff, stuff that they were not able to easily get while
in the camp.
Jeanne even starts sort of confusing the two.
She prays for dried apricots, but she fantasizes that they will come in a package from
Sears.
What is the metaphorical significance of Oswald's shouting, "the sun --the sun" in the last part of the play?
The sun represents light and truth. However, in this play, deception is a central theme. All the truths are hidden by the characters, who manipulate, hide and use subterfuge. They must pay the consequences for this.
The main conflict of this play stems from the fact that Mrs. Alving feels remorse for her part in helping to deceive the world about what sort of man Captain Alving was. She feels that she should have told the truth to Oswald long ago. If she had been honest with him all along, the disease that he inherited from his father may still have been unavoidable, but she could have saved him the confusion that he felt upon finding out that his father, who he thought was morally pure, had syphilis. His own character might have been less cynical if the truth about his father had not come as such a shock.
Oswald's last words are "the sun" in recognition of what he has missed and avoided throughout his life.
Why does Beowulf hang Grendel's arm from the rafters of Herot?
In addition to Rene's answer, I would also argue that the showing off the Grendel's arm is a way for Beowulf to symbolically "shout from the rafters" his success where other warriors have failed. He quite literally lords his success over them. Remember, Grendel has been snacking on Danish knights for a dozen years and none of the men could stop him.
Beowulf could just have easily left the arm where it was, or chucked it into the sea after its dying owner. Instead, he uses the arm to cement his own reputation.
Why does Montresor feel he has the right to take justice into his own hands?
Montresor is insane, but you should also consider his family's motto that no one harms a Montresor without being punished. Even his family's crest is of a snake biting a heel, so acts of revenge run in his family. We don't know whether other people in his family took revenge to the extent that Montresor does against Fortunato, but he believes he has the right to take justice in his own hands partly because of his family's name, but mostly because of his madness. He has taken revenge to the extreme, and the reader isn't sure whether Fortunato even did anything to Montresor. Because he's insane, Montresor may have just imagined that Fortunato had insulted him.
How far is Iago justified in hating Othello?
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