Answer:
The similarities in the works of both authors showed that they both love nature.
From both literary works, Basho and Wordsworth love nature and this can be seen in their works. They both stated that nature is important as it beautifies the environment and it's vital to our existence.
The difference between their literary works was that while Wordsworth was the partaker in the action and narrator, Basho was an observer. Wordsworth used the first-person point of view
Also, the majority of Woodsworth's words are adjectives while Basho followed the haiku tradition.
Explanation:
The machinery in the hospital represent the man’s vital functioning controlled by the technology and the slaughtering of the soldiers on the field of battle. The major was once a champion fencer which was altered by a war after a traumatic psychological and physical injury. He depicts his unfaithfulness in the machine to rehabilitate his hand considering it to be “nonsense” and “an idiotic idea”. The major was completely disillusion after his wife’s death due to pneumonia and deepen his fatality towards his life. By the end of the story the major convinces himself to put his hand in the machine and consider it to be fruitful.
Answer:
virtual high fives
Explanation:
everyone sometimes needs a high five from a hard day of work
What is the situational irony in the story federigo's Falcon by Giovanni Boccaccio.
The correct answer is B Mona’s son has a terminal illness so the Falcon can’t save him.
It is ironical that the reason Mona’s son had to keep alive, was the reason that then he dad to finally die. Mona went for the falcon to save his son’s live, but without expecting it, she was ending his life, because she did not know what Federigo was capable of doing just to please the love of his life. One fact that makes the situation more ironical, it is Mona visiting a man she did not expect to visit once in her life, and she just did it for her son’s life. This interested visit had a high price to pay, this abnormal action demanded from life a cost to bear. All what Federigo gave from his life to be with Mona, now was getting back in a very unreasonably manner. Federigo’s wealth had to disappear and Mona’s son’s precious life gone too, for both of them to be together. Mona “would rather have a man who lacks money than money that lacks a man.”