"When race of wind is stilled and sails are furled" is an symbolic phrase that has a different meaning from its literal one. The symbolic meaning of the phrase is this, 'It implies chaos or a lack of control.' It has something to do with the coming event that will happen.
I think the answer should be B, to me it makes much more grammatical sense
“Everybody must do THEIR share in cleaning up the polluted beach.”
I hope this helps! Feel free to correct me if I’m wrong
The protagonist and narrator of the novel. Huck is the thirteen-year-old son of the local drunk of St. Petersburg, Missouri, a town on the Mississippi River. Frequently forced to survive on his own wits and always a bit of an outcast, Huck is thoughtful, intelligent (though formally uneducated), and willing to come to his own conclusions about important matters, even if these conclusions contradict society’s norms. Nevertheless, Huck is still a boy, and is influenced by others, particularly by his imaginative friend, Tom. Sleeping on doorsteps when the weather is fair, in empty hogsheads during storms, and living off of what he receives from others, Huck lives the life of a destitute vagabond. He wears the clothes of full-grown men which he probably received as charity, and as Twain describes him, "he was fluttering with rags." Aunt Polly describes him as a "poor, motherless thing".
Flies multiply quickly :) mark brainliest
What I know of that it Scrooge is visited as the bell tolls at one o'clock by the first of three ghosts, as promised by Marley's ghost: the Ghost of Christmas Past. The apparition is a curious figure' that both an old man and a child appear to be.