Answer:
The answer is B
Explanation:
This is because it is giving us an impression of who he is based on his actions.
It gives the reader an opinion on him based on how he acts. It tells us he is powerful, but it also shows him in a terrible light because of his actions.
Hope this helps!^_^
Answer:
best friend
Explanation:
Govinda has come the way of Siddhartha, but on his own — <u><em>not as a disciple or as a follower of Siddhartha. </em></u>
Govinda's attaining the transcendent beatific smile and union with the river of life is, therefore, his own. Most important, he has accomplished this in the only way one can — independently.
In Siddhartha, Govinda is Siddhartha's <u>oldest friend</u>. We meet Govinda in the village of Siddhartha's birth. The story follows both of their attempts to find enlightenment. Initially, the two leave a life of great comfort, working as Brahmin and trying to find enlightenment through rituals.
Answer:
Past Tense Verbs
Explanation:
Past
Past tense verbs end in -ed
Examples: watched, stopped, made
My Gran is my hero. She is brilliant and loves to read. She also gets bored easily. As a young girl, she struggled a great deal. Because of this she ran away at the age of 21 and moved to the west coast. When she got there she chose to educate herself. She chose studies over security, as well as living in poverty. She ended up getting a job teaching at a university. She ended up marrying and having a beautiful family. Because she never stopped learning, she died with a burning curiosity about her life.
Nothing Gold Can Stay is a short poem of eight lines that contains subtle yet profound messages within metaphor, paradox and allegory. It is a compressed piece of work in which each word and sound plays its part in full.
Written when Frost was 48 years old, an experienced poet, whose life had known grief and family tragedy, the poem focuses on the inevitability of loss - how nature, time and mythology are all subject to cycles.
As with many a Frost poem, close observation of the natural world is the foundation for building poetic truths, inside of which lie hidden messages and ideas.
When the leaves start to show in the season of spring they are perceived as gold, but soon turn to familiar green and before too long they're fading as victims of time.
So it's possible to pick out three distinct associations:
the season of spring - holding on to precious color.
time - and the pace of life.
Eden - how humans experience grief and shame.