Answer:
The Bells, poem by Edgar Allan Poe, published posthumously in the magazine Sartain's Union (November 1849).
Explanation:
In every stanza he talks about different bells, and what noises they make, and for what occasion they are for. In the first stanza he talks about sleigh bells and Christmas bells. In this poem he uses the words tinkling and jingling to represent the bells.
Answer:
The conflict in the story makes the protagonist more resilient, allowing him to overcome the obstacles impeding his survival.
Explanation:
First of all, we need to point something out very clearly, the main character was very human, very naive, innocent, and trusty. However, after his mates betray him and they difficult him his stay at the camp he turns dark and decides he is going to be more egoist. This allows him to become stronger, fearless and improves his stance. Making him risk everything to grow and survive. The character starts very naive and finishes the story aware of the darkness of humanity.
A. Preposition: over; object of the preposition: bridge
A preposition shows the location of an object, it shows where something is. In this case the preposition is "over" as that is the only word that is showing 'where' something is and thus the car becomes the object.