Answer:
Miguel Street is a collection of linked short stories by V. S. Naipaul set in wartime Trinidad and Tobago. The stories draw on the author's childhood memories of Port of Spain. The author lived with his family in the Woodbrook district of the city in the 1940s, and the street in question, Luis Street, has been taken to be the model of Miguel Street.[1] Some of the inhabitants are members of the Hindu community to which Naipaul belonged. Naipaul also draws on wider Trinidadian culture, referring to cricket and quoting a number of lyrics by black calypso singers.[2]
Answer:
The answer is B.
Explanation:
The other options don't make any sense. Like, really, how would it be A? The answer, the only one that makes sense, is B.
Answer:
an imaginry person that inhabits a literary work. literary characters may be major or minor static or dynamic in shakespeare othello esdemona is a major character but one who is static like the moinor character bianca othello is a major character who is dynamic exhibiting an ability to change
Answer:your hope can let to your destination keep trying and never lose hope
Explanation:
The passage lists a few things which would lend towards the idea of him being a monster. First, it says "god's anger bare he." referring, presumably, to the abrahamic god famous for his wrath, showing that Grendel was exhibiting intense rage. Second, it uses the sentence "The monster intended some one of earthmen in the hall-building grand to entrap and make way with" which, while a written a little backwards by today's grammar rules, says that he is planning to take hold of and kidnap some of the men in the hall, something only a monster could do.<span />