I believe the correct answer is: "Beyond a bare,
weather-worn wall, about a hundred paces from the spot where the two friends
sat looking and listening as they drank their wine, was the village of the
Catalans."
In this excerpt from the novel “The Count Monte Cristo”, written by
Alexander Dumas, the quotation that best contributes to the setting of the
narrative is:
"Beyond a bare, weather-worn wall, about a hundred
paces from the spot where the two friends sat looking and listening as they
drank their wine, was the village of the Catalans."
The setting of the narrative represents the place where
narrative is being unfolded – its surroundings, position. This quotation is the
best contribution to the setting as it describes the place where the story
begins (beyond a bare, weather-worn wall, hundred paces from the spot… the village
of the Catalans).
Answer:
<u>D) giving</u>
Explanation:
Giving is the correct form
Answer: It will leave the next day.
Explanation:
In this poem by Edgar Allan Poe, the speaker deals with a loss of his lover, when he is visited by a strange guest - a raven that repeats the same word - <em>"nevermore."</em>
The raven lands on a bust of Pallas, and, when the narrator asks him about his name, the raven only utters:<em> "nevermore."</em> The narrator then assumes that the raven will leave him just like his friends did:
<em>"</em><em>On the morrow he will leave me</em><em>, as my Hopes have flown before.”</em>
<em>On the morrow</em> is an Old English expression that has a meaning<em> "the next day.</em>" The correct answer is, thus, that the speaker says that the raven will leave the next day.