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read the excerpt from hamlet, act i, scene i. marcellus: is it not like the king? horatio: as thou art to thyself: such was the very armour he had on when he the ambitious norway combated; so frownd he once, when, in an angry parle, he smote the sledded polacks on the ice. tis strange. marcellus: thus twice before, and jump at this dead hour, with martial stalk hath he gone by our watch. horatio: in what particular thought to work i know not; but in the gross and scope of my opinion, this bodes some strange eruption to our state. what do marcelluss and horatios characterization of the ghost imply? ∘ that a large battle is looming ∘ that someone is tricking them ∘ that the kingdom is cursed ∘ that something bad is going on
Marcellus and Horatio describe the ghost as resembling the late king and note its martial stalk, with Horatio saying it "bodes some strange eruption to our state." A "strange eruption" implies something bad will happen. The other options: no mention of an impending battle (first option), no indication of trickery (second), and "cursed" is too extreme (third). The ghost's appearance and Horatio's comment suggest something ominous is afoot.
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D. that something bad is going on (assuming the options are labeled A - D with D being "that something bad is going on"; if labels differ, adjust to the correct label with the text "that something bad is going on")