Answer:
Quoted from Virgil's "The Aeneid" and poken by Anchises, the father of Aeneas.
Explanation:
Taken from Book VI of "The Aeneid" by Virgil, the quoted excerpt is spoken by Anchises to Aeneas. Meeting his dead father's soul to in the underworld, Aeneas was told by his father about the fate of Rome.
Through the speech or voice of the wise father, Virgil propounds his own personal ideals, propagating that the Romans should try to be more merciful in their conquests. Virgil uses Anchises as a means to voice his own beliefs and wants for Rome to do and stand for. Anchises uses rhetoric in saying that the Roman Empire's justification for what it had done to bring upon justice and law is the same as the Trojans' and Aeneas had made when they settled in Rome.
Answer:
The fickleness of fortune, the temporary nature of its generosity and interest in a man is what the monk wants to warn the others. And in his tale, the Monk reveals that one trait of Fortune is that she whimsically supports and then changes her mind about the person she favors without no warning.
Explanation:
Answer: prohibit criticism of the feudal shogun system of government
Explanation:
It's The lightning thief, The sea of monsters, The titan's curse, The battle of Labyrinth, and Percy Jackson's Greek Gods. (That is the sequence of the book series.)