<u>The answer is 1: He thinks the fighting is foolish and wasteful.</u>
The narrator's view on the scene is not pleasant at all, Grendel finds himself in the middle of chaos, in the middle of all the battle's wastefulness and dead bodies of animals and men, and he can't help to see it as confusing and frightening and to feel "sick". All of this reveals that Grendel thinks the fighting is foolish and wasteful.
Third evil tendencies are early shown
I think is d, because of how obvious or clear it is when you open a window or when sun shnines
The correct answer of this question is the sixth option. The line "is not the soul thine own" bring out the idea that Faustus's human soul is predisposed to shun evil. The blood congeals on the page symbolizes the repulsion of his own body as opposed to what he wants to do. The Christ's blood that Faustus seen represents the sacrifice of Jesus for the salvation of sinners.
"A Wedding Gift," the narrator's tone is serious.