Answer:
thesues fights the Minotaur Aegeus drowns in the Aegean Sea Theseus becomes king.
Explanation:
Irving Washington's short story is about the guests of a host who are going to spend the night in host's home. They are going to spend the night at different rooms and one of the rooms is haunted as host indicates it. The narrator tells the story from this room he has meant for. There is a picture which fills him with the horror of feelings and antipathy. When it's revealed that this narrator has seen the ghost, he tells the story of this picture and first the gentlemen make the fun out of it. However, later it is unraveled by host that the picture indeed was haunted. Options B and C describes narrator's feelings in the room. Option A is the description of the night at breakfast. The correct answer is D when the narrator tells the story and everybody laughs.
Answer:
The narrator suggests that Gilray is deceiving him, but the narrator is actually not reliable.
Explanation:
"Gilray's Flowerpot" features an unreliable narrator, but very funny and humorous, which tells how Gilray asked him to water his plant every day, while he was away, but the narrator did not water the plant any day, for pyre laziness. The narrator claims that Gilray deceived him by saying that watering the plant would be like a hobby. We cannot know whether Gilray really cheated the narrator because he is unreliable.
I believe you are referring to this text:
<span>In the eighteenth century Josiah Wedgwood had made some of the most expensive stoneware ceramics – in jasper and basalt – in Britain, but this tea set shows that by the 1840s, when Wedgwood produced it, the company was aiming at a much wider market. This is quite clearly mid-range pottery, simple earthenware of a sort that many quite modest British households were then able to afford. But the owners of this particular set must have had serious social aspirations, because all three pieces have been decorated with a drape of lacy hallmarked silver.
From the text, the descriptive detail that best aids the reader to visualize the central topic which is a specific early Victorian tea set is "</span><span>some of the most expensive stoneware</span>".