Answer:
c: Champollion was amazed after seeing Karnak
Explanation:
Jean-François Champollion was a French linguist most famous for his work on Ancient Egypt and for deciphering Egyptian hieroglyphics.
In this excerpt we can clearly see signs of deep admiration and fascination Champollion had towards Egyptian culture, society and especially architecture.
That can best be seen from his sentence: "No nation on earth, ancient or modern, has ever conceived architecture on so noble and vast a scale".
This diary entry suggests that he was extremly amazed at the sight of Karnak.
Answer:
They are missing and lacking warm clothes and food.
Explanation:
" <em>My people, some of them, have run away to the hills, and have no blankets, no food. No one knows where they are—perhaps freezing to death.</em><em> </em>"
Answer:
Emerson warns that friendship is “too good to be believed,” because one can never truly know another person; to Emerson, there is a “strict science” that keeps all persons in “remoteness” from one another. Because a person cannot know another person completely, friendship then is based on an imagined concept.
Answer:
1. "some words are messengers that come from far away distant lands"
2. "some words die caged— they're difficult to translate and others build nests have chicks warm them feed them"
3. "the letters on this page are the prints they leave by the sea"
4. "they love clouds the wind and trees"
Explanation:
In these quotes, the author is explaining in a symbolic way how words have power. Books have words in them and books are free, like a bird.