Answer: Some literary critics point out that Lago has devilish characteristics.
Explanation:
Lago is the opposite of the divine. Medieval and Renaissance performances of the devil characterize this Shakespearean character. Lago is a liar, telling an imaginative story to manipulate people and bring them to destruction, and sees the most significant vulnerabilities of others and uses them to destroy them. Lago does it all out of love for evil.
He loves when others serve him, especially when they do it unconsciously. Because of his obsession and control over other people, every segment of his life will be imbued with these characteristics. Lago always destroys other lives to ruin his own ultimately. Lago is a hypocrite and a destructive person.
Answer:
The effect is:
B. Readers care more about what happens to the character.
Explanation:
If a character is only superficial, readers will not feel as if they know him. And it is difficult to care about someone we do not know well. However, <u>when an author takes time to properly develop a character, readers get to truly know him. His feelings, emotions, issues, traits, traumas and so on are all built and revealed in a way that makes readers close to this person. We begin to care about him, to worry about what will happen to him, to root for him - or, in some cases, against him. It's as if the character becomes important, now that we know him so well, to the point of engaging us.</u>
B.
The Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame and The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett
Answer:
1. man vs man
man vs animal
2. internal conflict in inside the people. I. their brain. mentally conflicts
3. Sanger raindsford hunt with zaroff