T.S Eliot's "The Waste Land" and Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales differ in their interpretation as they describe April's showers. In "The Waste Land", T.S Eliot described it as "sweet", but in The Canterbury Tales of Geoffrey Chaucer, he described it as cruel. Hope this answer helps.
The answer is Enlightenment philosophers were generally opposed to the Catholic Church and organized religion in general. The Catholic Church was seen as a hindrance of individual freedom and reason because of its dogmatism and insistence on being the only source of truth.
The Spy, written by James Fenimore Cooper, mainly took place in one setting. That setting was what they characters referred to as "the Locust." The Locust was the summer home of the Wharton's. They migrated to the home to try and avoid the war between the British and America and having to take sides.
Answer:
The answer is the first one