Answer:
All the same, we cling to our last pleasures as the tree cling to its last leaves"-comment on the analogy. This line is quoted from Katherine Mansfield's celebrated short story The Fly.
Explanation:
<span>1.)Horrified
2.)</span><span>His father has been murdered.
</span>
3.)<span>Hamlet is dying.
Hope this helps.And if I skipped a question,let me know,it was a little disorganized. :)</span>
Plain and simple, it means not having to die. The fear and the enigma of death is one of the most ancient and persisting human obsessions, that has been the subject of countless mythological stories and written pieces of literature.
In classic Greek and Roman literature, gods were immortal by definition. But there is also an interesting story about Cumaean Sybil, a priestess who was pursued by Apollo. When he promised to grant her one wish if she would yield to him, she asked to live eternally. But then she changed her mind and refused Apollo, who left her to decay alive, as she didn't ask for eternal youth.
In contemporary literature, there are numerous examples of fascination with the so-called "undead" - vampires, aliens, and other uncanny creatures.
What are the options on this. ???