Answer:
A woman has three daughters. The older two have no luck at all but the youngest, Nella, is as usual lovely and talented and more or less perfect. She is having a secret affair with a handsome prince who lives many miles away. The two lovers build a glass tunnel that runs under the ground—from the prince’s castle into the princess’s bedroom, so that they might “joy together” without the mom’s knowing it. Every night the prince runs through the tunnel naked to spend time with his young princess.
Nella’s two sisters, who are ugly and evil, learn of the affair and smash the glass tunnel. That night the prince is running so fast to reach his young lover that he doesn’t see the broken glass and the skin all over his body is cut. Because the glass that cut him was enchanted his wounds will not heal. The prince’s father vows that the woman who can find a remedy for the enchanted wounds will be the prince’s wife and if a man heals him he will be given half the kingdom.
Nella is heartbroken upon hearing of her mortally wounded prince, and goes out disguised to at least see him before he dies. Luckily, she overhears two ogres telling each other that the only thing in the whole world that will heal the prince is to smear the fat from their own bodies all over the prince. Nella, pretending to be lost in the woods, begs the ogres to let her into their house. The ogre husband, fancying a bit of human flesh, lets her in eagerly but sadly he drinks so much alcohol that he passes out before he gets to eat her.
Nella quickly gets to work and slaughters him then collects all the fat from his body in a bucket. She makes her way to the prince’s palace. She smears the fat into the prince’s wounds and he is healed as if by magic, then she reveals her identity and the marriage is swiftly arranged. And her sisters? They are burned alive in typical fairy tale fashion, “so that like unto leeches they should purge their blood in the cinders of their wickedness and envy.”
Answer: William Shakespeare's poem "The seven ages of men" portrays as journey, as fate man has been granted to live. A life given to live throughout the seven ages being shown. Robert Frosts "The road not taken" gives us a sense of choices, a path that we may chose for ourselves. For we will never know what either hold, but only what we seek. Both writers show ways life may be lived, however they show opposing view points on how it is lived. They bring us to the same question many ask themselves, do we chose our fate, or does fate chose us?
Explanation: I hope this helps, both are wonderful pieces of literature as well as amazing writers
The “man” Thoreau refers to in the excerpt that "He must have the most up-to-date news at all times.", option D is correct.
<h3>What is the excerpt, Walden?</h3>
Walden explicates Henry David Thoreau's two-year sabbatical in a self-built cabin by a lake in the woods, where he conveyed what he learnt about isolation, nature, work, thinking, and fulfillment during his break from modern city life.
The “man” Thoreau refers to in the excerpt that "He must have the most up-to-date news at all times."
Thus, the answer is option D.
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Malcolm claims he would be a bad king. He would take any women he wanted, and he would make Macbeth look like an angel. He says he would do this to test Macduff and see if he is loyal to his country.