I believe that the line from "Helen Grey" which suggests that Helen has an unrealistic sense of herself is the last option - Stoop from your cold height, Helen Grey.
She is giving advice to herself that she should change because nobody will be there for her unless she does that.
Answer:
The narrator in Geoffrey Chaucer's "THE CANTERBURY TALES" joins twenty-eight pilgrims in order to make the account of the incident look more real.
Explanation:
Geoffrey Chaucer is considered <em>The Father English Poetry</em> and similarly he is first realist of English literature. By making the narrator join the twenty-eight pilgrims at the inn, Chaucer make sure that his poetry be considered realistic. The narrator himself becomes a character who is not free of biases and his own prejudices.
Answer:
early Sunday morning and his companions set out to see the whales
Its a drive in and movie story