Answer:
George Parker Winship, A. M. (29 July 1871 – 22 June 1952) was an American librarian and author, born in Bridgewater, Massachusetts. He graduated from Harvard in 1893.
He was librarian of the John Carter Brown Library at Providence, R.I. from 1895 to 1915. Subsequently, he took charge of the collection of rare books made by Harry Elkins Widener and housed in the new Widener Memorial Library at Harvard. Winship was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society in 1899.[1]
Winship was a scholar as well as a librarian. He edited a number of historical works and published: The Coronado Expedition (1896); John Cabot (1898); Geoffrey Chaucer, (1900); Cabot Bibliography (1900); William Caxton (1909); Printing in South America (1912); and The John Carter Brown Library (1914).
Answer:
An apple, because she wasn't invited; it was intended for the prettiest goddess, and she was the goddess known for causing trouble
Explanation:
The Trojan War and The Fall of Troy, i do my reading
Answer:
<em>"Come and show me another city with lifted head singing so proud..."</em>
Explanation:
"Chicago" (1914) is a poem written by Carl Sandburg (1878 – 1967), an American poet. It is about the U.S. city of Chicago.
The poem's fifth line calls Chicago "City of the Big Shoulders", which has been adopted as one Chicago's many nicknames.
Throughout the whole poem and these lines the poet has a very proud tone. When selecting from the provided lines, the pride is most clearly connoted by the use of words, <em>"Come and show me"</em> and <em>"lifted head singing so proud".</em>
Ballad poems are poems telling a story usually through a song.
narrative poems tell a story using voices of narrators or charectors using metaphored versus