Psychiatrist was asking and investigating about the death of Seymour so was asking questions related to that.
<u>Explanation:</u>
One potential, if far less fulfilling, explanation behind Seymour's death is pedophilia. He's pulled in to Sybil and even ventures to such an extreme as to kiss her foot. He's at that point loaded up with disgrace at his activity thus executes himself, saving Sybil's virtue all the while.
So psychiatrist is trying to know the reason of the death of Seymour and investigating in that matter.
So they could get married asap instead of juliet and romeo having the slightest chance to be wed
In Emily Dickinson’s poem, she uses metaphor, likening the notion of hope to a bird that flies despite “the storm”, the cold of “the chilliest land” and the isolation of “the strangest sea” and because such metaphorical bird “flies” inside one’s “soul”, such hope is personified. In Finding Flight, the process is similar although here the text is not a poem but a story in prose. The device of remembrance of the figure of the late grandfather turns a hummingbird into a symbol of hope for the narrator. There is no metaphor here but actually symbolism. The hummingbird symbolizes both hope and the memory of the beloved grandfather who has “passed”. The bird “gives hope” both to the grandfather and the granddaughter. The plot structure is the same for both works, a reflection on the luminosity of hope, then a period of hardship that tests hope and then the resilience of hope despite all the troubles and darkness of life.
A suffix ment of nouns, often concrete, denoting an action or resulting state ( abridgment; refreshment), a product ( fragment), or means ( ornament)
Suffix -tion. (non-productive) Used to form nouns meaning "the action of (a verb)" or "the result of (a verb)". Words ending in this suffix are almost always derived from a similar Latin word; a few (eg gumption) are not derived from Latin and are unrelated to any verb.