Answer:
Once they are trapped each regarded the other with disdain and hate initially, until they made a pact to be friendly to each other
Explanation:
Before both men were trapped by the tree which fell on them and hurt them, they both hated each other and each wished evil to the other person.
When they met on that fateful day, regardless of the rifle in the hand of each man, they had a code to not just kill except their honor was at stake.
As they lay on the ground after the tree fell on them, each man was alive but helpless and struggling. Both of them bragged to each other on how his men would come to his rescue, and when they did, the other man would be severely dealt with. They regarded each other with so much disdain that each prayed for his men to get there first.
But right before the end of the story both men agreed to let the age long feud die and be friends.
Answer:
The cottager and his wife and miser are similar in that they give gold too much importance.
Explanation:
The cottager and his wife and miser are people who let gold control their feelings, giving a value that gold does not deserve. The cottager and his wife, made gold their source of greed by sacrificing things that were more important than him, like the chicken. The miser, on the other hand, gave importance to obsolete gold, which would not be used and only served to inflate the miser's ego.
Aesop, uses these two fables to pass a great moral lesson. In "The Hen and the Golden Eggs" he shows that whoever wants everything is left with nothing and that greed makes people devalue the true wealth they have. "The Miser," on the other hand, presents the lesson that the value of things is defined by their usefulness, if a valuable thing like gold is not used and becomes obsolete, it makes it as valuable as a stone. In addition, history shows that being stingy allows a person not to enjoy its own riches, leaving them to other people.
1). ... add his order ...
2). ... advise us.
3). ... into the cracks ...
4). He is eligible ...
5). ... extinct.
6). ... until 9:00 PM.
7). ... religious rites ...