Answer: Hello! This one is a little tricky, but I think your answer here would be B.
Explanation: In this poem, The Masque of Red Death, the characters are forcefully quarentining themselves to stay away from others and evade the viral sickness going around (the plague). I think that Poe was writing about his feelings of lonliness in that part, as the abbey could have been a metaphor for having to keep people out of your life for the greater good.
Hope that this helps out somehow! Have a great day!
The author includes logical evidence that Indian workers and formerly enslaved people didn't get along because wages went down.
In the passage, it states:
"The Indian coolies and the ex-slaves, who resented the newcomers flooding the colonies and driving down wages, were instant rivals."
In this case, the Indian coolies are the newcomers and the ex-slaves are the ones resenting them. Therefore, the ex-slaves resent the Indian coolies because they were driving down wages.
The third one down is correct
John Smith suggests that "people make the most errors misusing the order of operations" ("Solving Equations").
Answer: Characters • Environments • Chronology of the events • Importance of the characters • Relationship between the characters • Climax of the story • End of the story of the story "The Canterville Ghost"
Explanation:
Answer:
In The Odysseys by Homer, Odyssey when on cyclopes island proclaim his identity which is an example of pride and hubris. Odyssey decides to control his actions with the Polyphemus, despite the appeals made by his crew to depart from the island quickly. As a result due to his pride and arrogance, his men have to suffer. His pride and arrogance go against the Greek values when he yells back at Polyphemus, calling himself "raider of the cities" and that he is from Ithaca to commend himself. Such pride leads him to his downfall as hubris was a sin as believed by the Greek. They believed that the humans were below them in a hierarchy and showing hubris was an act of equalizing themselves with the god.