Answer:
Both took place at the same time
Explanation:
<u>WHILE</u>
Answer:
A. The aunt thinks that the content of the story was too graphic for the children, but the bachelor disagrees.
Explanation:
The short story "The Storyteller" by Saki tells the story of a train journey where three small children along with their aunt were on a train to Templecombe. Beside them in the same compartment was a young bachelor who seemed less than impressed to be in the same compartment with the group.
In an attempt to distract and quieten the children, the bachelor ended up telling a story of a<em> "very good girl"</em> who was devoured by a wolf. Though the children were able to be good and <em>"quiet for ten minutes"</em>, a feat which the bachelor insist the aunt wasn't able to do, the aunt exclaimed that it was too graphic for them to be told that story. the gory details, the ending which resulted in the good girl dead, and the medals for being good leading to her death all were the many topics that the aunt had most presumably tried hard to swerve the children away from learning. In her opinion, she wanted to teach them only good things and not something as graphic as the young man had just done. This causes conflict between the two adults.
Thus, the correct answer is option A.
The main topic for a class discussion after reading the poem by Emily Dickinson "Musicians Wrestle Everywhere" is A) where the action of the poem takes place. It is due to the fact that this poem relates not only to music or bands, but to the everyday sounds that are around us even before we wake up until the end of the day. The author refers to "new life", as a biblical reference in which life begins every single day, she also refers to music as "the spheres" which could symbolize the mathematical influence there exist in music. She ends up telling that the music or sounds "Of vanished Dames- and Men" are celestial. Therefore, the poem could be related to life, its beginning, its end, the ascension to Heaven, reborn and all of the former beyond the mundane noises.
A of course, Public speaking is nothing without a focused audience.