Answer:
<em>Little inferior; whom my thoughts pursue</em>
<em>With wonder, and could love, so lively shines </em>
and
<em>In them Divine resemblance, and such grace </em>
<em>The hand that formd them on their shape hath pourd.</em>
Explanation:
These two sets of lines show how Satan acknowledges the goodness of God. In the first set, Satan tells us that his "thoughts pursue" God, and he also talks about love and shine. In the second set of lines, Satan talks about God's "divine resemblance," and he tells us that he made his creations with "grace." All of these positive words show that Satan feels some kind of respect towards God.
Iambic pentameter contains 10 syllables per line, while prose contains no limit on syllables per line.
Nouns are actual things or objects. From that you know that skin is a thing, lobsters are things and claws are things so the answers are C D and E
Answer:
The strange thing about Zaroff's reply is that he thinks that Rainsford is sickened by his long swim before he arrived, however, we know that he is sickened by the thought of Zaroff's library of heads he has mounted and the idea of the "game" he has created.
Explanation:
Before Rainsford excuses himself, Zaroff invites Rainsford to view his collection of heads of men that he has hunted. When Rainsford claims that he is not feeling well, Zaroff's thinks that he is tired from the swim when in reality, he is sickened by Zaroff's horrifying "game" he has created. The point is: it does not enter Zaroff's mind that Rainsford might be sickened at Zaroff's custom of hunting humans.