Answer:
I wonder what would have happened of they didnt see the burning church? I haven't read the book in a while lol
Answer and Explanation:
Ovid managed to generate suspense in "Pyramus and Thisbe" from the beginning of the narrative, when only young people communicate through a small space between their homes, and they can be discovered at any time by someone who would prevent them from being together. However, the high point of the suspense is portrayed at the end of the poem, when Ovid causes Pyramus to find his beloved's bloody vein and is extremely sad, making the reader unable to know what he will actually do, until he decides he needs to die. Furthermore, the suspense gets even greater when Thisbe finds her beloved dead and decides to have the same end.
He seems like a decent person. Ive never read the book
Is that you?
Answer:
That England forgot about it's previous self
Explanation:
Quote on lines 51-56 from the 'deserted village':
Ill fares the land, to hastening ills a prey,
Where wealth accumulates, and men decay:
Princes and lords may flourish, or may fade;
A breath can make them, as a breath has made;
But a bold peasantry, their country's pride,
When once destroyed can never be supplied.
Answer:
The poem tell us that in the process of people exploring the riches of the countryside, the earth was misused leading to it's destruction.
It gave an example of a worker who was interested in the gains of the land and while at it destroys it. It emphasized the loss of pride in the land a person toiled.
Thus, England never remained the same.
Answer:
Readers do not learn of the true identity of Spaulding until the end of the story.
Explanation: I took the test