The right answer for the question that is being asked and shown above is that: "B. To show the audience that he believed that Boniface deserved to be in Hell as well" In Canto XIX of the Inferno, Pope Nicholas III mistakes Dante for Pope Boniface VIII. Most likely the author's purpose in this scene is to show the audience that he believed that Boniface deserved to be in Hell as well
<span>From my point of view the work on the theme in Anglo-Saxon poetics got off on what I always thought was the wrong foot. What Francis Peabody Magoun, Jr., called a theme was not what either I or Parry meant by the term. His meaning, nevertheless, was to prevail and is found in Riedinger's Speculum article—not under that name, however, but as a "cluster" of motifs. [1] Yet could it be that that is as close to my theme as can be expected in Anglo-Saxon poetry? Let us examine the proposition, because those who have sought "theme" there seem to have been frustrated, as was, for example, Francelia Clark, who has investigated this subject thoroughly. [2]
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Everyone leaves and the hall is empty for 12 years.
Answer:
The guid showed the tourist the sight of pokhara (into passive voice)
San Francisco and Chicago have enacted initiatives that encourage citizens
to clean up or cultivate gardens in their vacant lots.