Answer: The last word of Keesh was "It is not for a boy to know about witches, and I know nothing about witches. I only have means whereby I may kill an ice-bear with ease, that's all. It would be headcraft, not witchcraft".
In "The Story of Keesh" by Jack London, the people of the tribe did not believe that Keesh had hunt a large polar bear by himself, so they accused him and his mother of witchcraft. It required dignity and manhood for him to defend himself and speak against the elder hunters who disliked him.
Answer:
the world has changed alot there are buildings in the shapes of circles the world does not look the same it looks like it is more peaceful and relaxing the earth is a barely habitable pile of radioactive rubble, and you long ago ceased to exist
Explanation:
Answer: William Shakespeare's poem "The seven ages of men" portrays as journey, as fate man has been granted to live. A life given to live throughout the seven ages being shown. Robert Frosts "The road not taken" gives us a sense of choices, a path that we may chose for ourselves. For we will never know what either hold, but only what we seek. Both writers show ways life may be lived, however they show opposing view points on how it is lived. They bring us to the same question many ask themselves, do we chose our fate, or does fate chose us?
Explanation: I hope this helps, both are wonderful pieces of literature as well as amazing writers
A is wrong because "Wendys'" should be "Wendy's", because the possessive isn't plural.
C is wrong because "Its" should be "It's", because "It's" is a contraction for "It is."
D is wrong because the apostrophe should be after "judges", not "statements." Statements do not own anything, but the judges own the statements.
B is the correct answer.