Marlow is rather ambiguous in his work Doctor Faustus when it comes to fate and free will.
On one hand, it is implied that Faustus has the opportunity to choose his own destiny, to make the appropriate decision, repent for his sins, and then he will be saved. One of the angels tells him the following:
<em>"Faustus, repent yet, God will pity thee." </em>(Act II Scene III)
On the other hand, however, it is implied several times throughout the work that Faustus's decisions don't really matter - his life was preordained, meaning that destiny chooses what happens with him and his life. This leads us to believe that regardless of his desires, Faustus would always go down the 'evil' path because ultimately that wasn't even his decision - it was what destiny picked for him.
Answer:
According to this excerpt, how has Odysseus changed over the course of his adventure? He has become more humble and patient in battle.
The answer is letter A. True. The sentence's, "You handed the test results to Joan", question form is, "To whom did you hand the test results?". We use whom in the sentence because "Joan" is referred to as the direct object.
Answer:
A
Explanation:
You would put the apostrophe after the word it and substitute the letter "i" with it in the word "is"