This question is missing the excerpt. I've found it online. It is the following:
Read the excerpt from Part 4 of The Odyssey.
As long as bread and good red wine remained to keep the men up, and appease their craving, they would not touch the cattle. But in the end, when all the barley in the ship was gone, so hunger drove them to scour the wild shore with angling hooks, for fishes and seafowl, whatever fell into their hands; and lean days wore their bellies thin.
Answer:
The theme that is best revealed by this conflict is:
A. It is easy to uphold morals when one is not suffering.
Explanation:
<u>In this part of the epic poem The Odyssey, by Homer, the hero Odysseus and his men have landed on an island. Even though there is cattle in the island, Odysseus has been warned to not allow his men to kill and eat it, since this cattle is sacred. However, the men are only capable of upholding their morals and respecting the order to not kill the cattle while they are not suffering. As long as they have food and wine, the cattle is safe. But, once they have consumed their provisions, they forget about their morals and the warning, kill the cattle, and end up dead as a punishment from the gods.</u>
Explanation:
a person's ability to perceive humour or appreciate a joke
Answer:
True son was gloomy as the chapter opens, because has he sets his sights on Fort Pitt he felt oppressed by a dark structure. also he viewed him as sign of triumph over the culture of the whites.
Explanation:
When True Son first sets his eyes on Fort Pitt in Chapter 5, he felt trapped by the gloomy, dark structure. He sees the tradition as an ugly case of the limited white culture.
Fort Pitt was viewed by True Son as an indication of his triumph over the whites. the last sign of white civilization was Fort Pitt before True Son's beloved in country of Indian.
Answer. 8 down is Erin, 6 is off to, 18 is Otis, 45 is Dazs, 51 is Shar