Answer:
I think it might be the first one. It just seems a lot more reasonable to me.
Explanation:
Last year, we have a quiz that's like 50% of our grade but the teacher announced it before the weekdays on the last minute of our class so my classmates never took it seriously. During the weekdays, I really studied and review the material while my "friends" was going to the mall, playing games, etc.. and they we're procrastinating and just being lazy in general. I told them numerous times that we have a quiz but they basically just said and I quoted: "Don't be boring. It's just a quiz" and "We still have time to review." On the day of the quiz, half of the class failed because they didn't study except for me and few other people. I was happy for my success while they need to retake the course.
<span>In the poem "Counting Small-boned Bodies" written by Robert Bly, Bly creates a sort of sympathy for his readers. A bit of innocence is shed on the readers as they learn what happens to the war victims. Their bodies sit there serving as nothing but a trophy for the world to commemorate the war. Bly states all the things that they could serve purposes for but none that which will happen.</span>
I would say that the answer is his strength.
During the Trojan War, Achilles was a great warrior known for slaying Hector outside the gates of Troy. His resilience was one of his greatest strengths as he was dipped in the waters of the River Styx in the Underworld as a child, granting him invulnerability all over his body. However, he had one weakness: his heel. His mother held onto his heel while dipping him in the River Styx, and thus, this is the only place on his entire body that could kill him. Achilles got overconfident as a result of his immunity, and he was caught off guard when Paris presumably shot him in the heel with an arrow, killing the great warrior.