Answer:
Grendel watches a great horned goat attempt to ascend the cliff side toward the mere. Angered by the goat’s dogged pursuit, Grendel yells at the creature. When the goat does not respond, Grendel reacts by throwing trees and stones at it. The goat continues to climb even after its skull has been split, and appears to continue climbing even after it dies.
That evening, Grendel goes to watch the humans and their daily routines. An old woman tells a group of children about a giant with the strength of thirty thanes who will come across the sea someday. Later that same night, Grendel watches as people gather at the bedside of the ailing Shaper. The Shaper tries to make a prediction about the fate of the Danes, but he dies before he can finish the sentence. About an hour later, the news of the Shaper’s death arrives at the house of a sleeping nobleman, whose middle-aged wife seems to have shared an unspoken, unconsummated love with the Shaper. Grendel watches old women prepare the Shaper for burial, and then he returns home to the mere.
Explanation:
The correct answer is A they are not allowed to vote they might be to young.
Ik for sure that the main idea for question number 3 is definitely the war. I’m not sure abt the rest. Sry!
Answer:
I would say that the best answer to the question: The genius of Shakespeare´s sonnets is that they:___, would be: Merge form and content into a unified whole.
Explanation:
In English poetry, there have been, since its initiation, two styles that have heavily influenced it: the Petrarchan sonnet and the Shakespearean sonnet. In the case of Shakespeare he became highly influential not only because he took a different route to what had, up until his time, been the norm in lyric poetry, especially of the romantic kind, but he actually innovated on it, and even changed it. What Shakesperare did was to create his poems using his own style of meter and rhyme to meet his objectives, going over the styles that had been used by other poets of his time, and of previous times. But he also took content, mostly romantic in essence, and tweaked it, so that, where once poets created sonnets about love and beauty as positive and desirable situations, Shakespeare might not always portray such emotions in that way. But most importantly, what Shakespeare did was to merge form (meter and rhyme) and unified it with the complex thoughts of his time, to produce a unified whole.