Answer:
The option that contains the objective summary of "forgiveness triumphs" theme is:
B. The scene where Laertes asks forgiveness helps demonstrate that forgiveness can be more powerful than revenge.
Explanation:
<em>Exchange forgiveness with me, noble Hamlet:
</em>
<em>Mine and my father's death come not upon thee,
</em>
<em>Nor thine on me! [Dies.]
</em>
<em>Hamlet: Heaven make thee free of it! I follow thee.
</em>
<em>I am dead, Horatio.
</em>
-Hamlet,William Shakespeare
<u>Laertes seeks revenge for his father's and sister's deaths, for which he blames Hamlet. However, once they are both poisoned and about to die, Laertes realizes the futility of revenge. Death conquers all. Killing someone only brings more tragedy and suffering onto oneself and others. That is why Laertes asks Hamlet to "exchange forgiveness" with him: so that they can both be free from the deadly ropes of revenge and resentment.</u>
Do you have more information?
The article "Life in 999: A Grim Struggle" indicates life as it was amid the Anglo-Saxon period. The article, from Time magazine, portrays the setting of the terrains as a "gathering of untamed backwoods, endless supply of trees and brush and brier, dim and unwelcoming." Readers of Beowulf can perceive how this grabs on the setting of the epic story. The setting of the Anglo-Saxon was huge.
A. While driving to work this morning, I passed a car accident at the corner of Elm and Juniper