Zeus create Pandora as the gift for the brother of Prometheus, Epimetheus. Zeus told Epimetheus to marry Pandora and accept the box that Pandora give to her. Pandora give the box but she is very curious about what's inside the box and even insist and beg to Epimetheus to let her peek whats inside it. One night when everybody is asleep, Pandora stole the key and open the box. Then all the bad things that is sealed in the box was flew in a from as a bug but Pandora tried to put it back but its too late. The last one came out was not as bad as the other, and that is Hope that reminds the people in every bad happenings, there is still hope behind
“Life is for the strong, to be lived by the strong, and if need be, taken by the strong”
<u>Answer:</u>
"The use of letters and secret meetings develops the theme that hiding the truth will eventually lead to hardship" best explains the conventions of plot and setting contribute to the theme.
<u>Explanation:</u>
Because, Mrs. Linde has left a note to meet her alone while Krogstad mysteriously came to visit her denotes that either meeting in public or in an open space will eventually lead to an issue that will be beyond their control. Here in the given options, both hiding the truth and revealing the truth will lead them to hardship. Revealing the truth will mess up both the lives and the people who are related to them as well. But hiding the truth is much worse as it will have a lot more consequences.
"To a Louse" is a poem by Scottish poet Robert Burns. It tells the story of a lady in church who looks elegant, fancy and beautiful. However, he notices that she has a louse in her bonnet. He begins talking to a louse about how elegant the woman is, and how the animal would be more at home with a beggar. However, at the end of the poem, he realizes that for the louse, any human being is prey.
The main message is an attempt to highlight how underneath all our fancy clothes, every human is ultimately just another human being, and that there is no difference between any of us to a louse, because we are all equal.