The answer is B. because the excerpt is depicting Minerva, goddess of wisdom and warfare, giving suggestions to a mortal.
Chalmers believed that Paine's arguments are pure fantasy that would be harmful to the colonies, as to him independence is a ridiculous idea. It would open them up to the French and the Spaniards and lose the them the most valuable trading partner which was at the time England.
Answer:
I don't think they would.
Explanation:
Say that the newspapers are in America. The newspapers would be unlikely to write about a rebellion in, say, Japan if it has nothing to do with America. Newspapers only report the news if it has something to do with America. You know those people who buy a newspaper everyday to read? Do you think they're going to waste their money buying a newspaper in America that talks about a rebellion in Japan? Those people don't care about what happens in Japan, because the rebellions don't effect them.
Of course, there are exceptions, like if those people had a relative living in Japan. However, I'm talking about the majority of people who buy newspapers. They want to know what's going on in America, not something that's happening in some other country they don't care about.
If the newspapers wrote about it, their sales would go down and they would lose money.
Unless the rebellion is related to America in some way, I don't think newspapers would write about it since they might lose money, writing about things irrelevant to America.
After reading the quotes, we can choose the following as the best one to convey Frankenstein's desire to kill the creature:
C. "Come on then, that I may extinguish the spark which I so negligently bestowed."
Dr. Victor Frankenstein, one of the characters in Mary Shelley's novel "Frankenstein," puts together body parts from different corpses and gives life to a horrendous creature.
Although the creature's appearance and existence is repulsive, it does have feelings, like a human.
However, Frankenstein is incapable of loving it. He soon begins to desire to kill the creature, especially when it starts to destroy the things and people Frankenstein loves the most.
That is what is shown in the passage "Come on then, that I may extinguish the spark which I so negligently bestowed."
What he means is that he wants to take away the life he has given to the creature.
With that in mind, option C is the best choice.
Learn more about "Frankenstein" here:
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