Answer:
you can find your answer on course hero just search this question
Explanation:
<span> the ocean, beginning "Roll on, thou deep and dark blue ocean—roll!," Byron contrasts its permanence, power, and freedom with vanished civilizations: "Thy shores are empires, changed in all save thee—/ Assyria, Greece, Rome, Carthage, what are they?" The ocean remains, "Dark-heaving;—boundless, endless, and sublime—/ The image of Eternity...." </span>
Answer:
OD
Explanation:
OA: A web site could be useful for a quick answer but not a very accurate one. Especially since these people arent certified in food.
OB: A book sounds like a very credible place to look for answers but this book is more about personal experiences in diets and isn't certified in food.
OC: An article sounds like a very credible source but is from a person who studied food related problems, meaning that what they have studied isnt as official as an actual certified worker in food.
OD: The most credible source for Ray to choose would be a book on gluten-free diets by an author who has two degrees in nutrition and works at the University of Rockingham.
D. Humor
Because I read the book and its very serious, it does not have humor whatsoever.
Elisa has a bad relationship with her husband Henry. Henry doesn't appreciate Elisa's femininity and sexuality. She grows the chrysanthemus as they were her children. However, her encounter with the tinker reawakens her sexuality and gives her hope. Her realization that her life is not going to change is real whe she sees the flowers thrown on the road.