The persona in "To His Coy Mistress" is basically a guy coaxing his lady love to "do it" with him using arguments of time and mortality. While this concept of convincing a woman to "give it up" is timeless, in this poem it is rather clear how the persona sees women as objects for pleasure. His persuasion, while flowing with cadence, reeks of machismo typical of predominantly patriarchal age.
Grover proves that he is a real friend to Percy. For example, during the battle between Percy and Ares, Grover supports Percy throughout the conflict.
I'm sorry I only have the answer for the first question. I hope this helped you enough though
India was a British colony at the time
Answer:
The authors purpose of that story is telling us the amount of men that are angry in many ways.
Explanation: