I think the passage that best illustrates the chivalrous behavior Arcite exhibits toward Palamon, just before his death is letter B which is "In all this world right now I know of none / So worthy to be loved as Palamon, / Who serves you and will do so all his life."
The entire story is a dream sequence after the main characters eat some berries if I’m not mistaken. The play happening in the summer months make the storyline a complete midsummer nights dream
The correct answer is A) He set his daughter and her child adrift at sea in a sealed chest.
What Acrisius did to try to keep the prophecy of his death from being fulfilled was that he set his daughter and her child adrift at sea in a sealed chest.
We are referring to Greek mythology. After consulting the Oracle of Delphi, Acricus was told that one day he will be killed by the son of his daughter Danae. That is why he decided to imprison his daughter in a chamber, but God Zeus impregnates her. The baby was named Perseus. Angered by the situation, Acrius decided to put Danae and the baby in a chest and he threw into the sea. Zeus and Poseidon intervene and save the mother and the child.
Answer:
means to change you mind or what you are doing...
Explanation:
:)
False, unspoken factors do influence the effectiveness of persuasion.