I’m pretty sure it’s a metaphor!
the poet refers to the 'wealth' of happiness and gaiety.
Explanation:
do you want me to write the essay or tell you how to write one
I think it is D) By the end of the story - no one could believe it - the main character was dead
The answer on E2020 is
C. The booster club provided a tray of fresh watermelon slices.
(I just took the Quiz)
The nurse helps Romeo and Juliet's relationship because she acts as a confidante for Juliet, one of the very few people who actually knows that they are together. After they meet, the Nurse goes on an errand to make the wedding arrangements with Romeo. She appears in the street and he lets her know when to be at the Friar's for the wedding. She says "This afternoon, sir? well, she shall be there." This plotting continues when she relays the news to Juliet, saying "Then hie you hence to Friar Laurence' cell;
<span>There stays a husband to make you a wife."
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The Nurse also makes it possible for them to see each other even after Romeo has been banished. When Romeo is hiding in Friar Laurence's chambers, the Nurse comes in with a ring for Romeo from Juliet, showing that she still wants to see him. She says "Here, sir, a ring she bid me give you, sir: Hie you, make haste, for it grows very late." This is in reference to the plan they have just made for Romeo to sneak into Juliet's chambers for one last visit before he has to go to Mantua. Her interactions with both Romeo and Juliet, helping them get together, get married, and see each other is part of the reason they are able to do all of those things.