Answer: In "Beowulf," Grendel is always the villan of the story. He is presented as a man-eating demon, who daily slaughters Danes and feeds on his corpres. He is never anything more than an obstacle for Beowulf to overcome.
On the contraty, in "Grendel," the reader can see different aspects of him. He is presented as an inteligent creature, capable of rational thoughs and emotions.
The story shows Grendel's changes and growth. It explores his relationship with his mother, his fascination with humans -which eventually turns into hatred and disgust-, and provides his point of view about the battle with Beowulf.
Explanation:
You are a person and you can make a difference by doing anything :)
Answer:
William Blake´s use of figurative language tells us that his hatred grew and grew as an apple tree and his enemy (his foe) stretched beneath the tree.
Explanation:
It makes us aware what bad feelings can cause in other´s peoples´ lives and in our own, if we try to conceal them or not to show them. They will always arise in probably dangerous forms for both, the reciever and the beholder.
The Loss of American Indian Life and Culture. As American settlers pushed westward, they inevitably came into conflict with Indian tribes that had long been living on the land. The result was devastating for the Indian tribes, which lacked the weapons and group cohesion to fight back against such well-armed forces.
This report found generally that the federal government was failing at its goals of protecting Native Americans, their land, and their resources, both personal and cultural.
After the Meriam report, Secretary of the Interior Hubert Work proposed that the Rockefeller Foundation support a survey by the Institute for Government Research. Five years after the Meriam Report, the Federal government began overhauling its Native American policy with the Wheeler-Howard Act (Indian Reorganization Act of 1934).
Answer:
"Newton's rules explain how gravity affects objects"
Explanation:
Simple heuristic:
Descriptions of quality (interesting, famous, brilliant) are always subject to the context (person, time period, entity, etc).
Newton's rules of gravity are NOT subject to context, thus objective.