This question seems to be deficient. However, there´s enough information to find the right answer.
Answer:
In my opinion, the Ancient Mariner's punishment was fair, and his fate was worse than the sailors'.
Explanation:
In The Rime of the Ancient Mariner (1798), by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, assuming that the sailors' punishment was death, even though we are not certain about what final fate their souls had after that, their suffering could be thought of as less than the Ancient Mariner's, who is left alive but cursed with an awful fate.
Both the sailors and the Ancient Mariner are at fault for killing the bird that had saved them because the sailors praised him afterward. However, the main fault rests in the Ancient Mariner, who did the actual killing, and must carry the burden of being responsible for the death of his crewmembers.
If a source is correct and trustworthy then it is credible, which means that you can use it in official research as a valid source without having your work discredited. This means that it is usable, and has a merit, and you can use it without being afraid of plagiarism or something else.
the setting of a lovely city, the characters of the lovers, the character of the lovers' parents, the conflict of a grudge between the two families
The lovely city is the first thing introduced in the prologue. The line "In fair Verona where we lay our scene" names the city and describes it as fair. The characters of the lovers are introduced when it says, "From forth the fatal loins of these two foes/ A pair of star-crossed lovers take their life." These two lines tell us that children from enemies fall in love and commit suicide. The characters of the parents are also introduced in these lines and continued when it describes how the death of their children is the only thing that can remove the grudge. The grudge conflict is introduced in the line "From ancient grudge break to new mutiny/ Where civil blood makes civil hands unclean". The courtyard and family tomb are not in the prologue and the two lovers never fight.
<span>He wants Kenny to confront his fears. It seems as though he believes in Kenny, and wants him to get past the things that scare him so he can succeed.</span>
Answer:
Explanation:
just talk about how competition isn't necessary for success because everyone is different and some people are better then others in one thing and people have their strengths and weaknesses in different spots so you can't compete others because no one is like you, you are your own person