it was a garish morning and u wondered in the wood trying to find where ur camping team went. the previous night you laggard to follow your group cause u fell in a hole but braved it up and kept going with your team but eventualy got tired and after ur short break they dissaperd. while walking on the path u find a river that u decide to drink from but before you could u saw alot of effervesco from the water. you got up and started to walk back on the path. you pace started to degradtion cause of the ankle was swelling more cause of how long u walked on it for. you found a mar tree and sat on it to rest beside the trail. while u were resting u heard a jovial voice of ur friend. you looked up to see him crying with tears. (your friend) told how they saw you disapered and went to look out but it was to dark and some of your class mates just fallacy that u left by ur self. After getting caught up chatting we hastened our pace to get to the group. They admiried ur Degetence in the woods. Some of your other classmates said that u were to Imerious and stupid t not say anything about. the good thing was that you got back to the camp.
hope this helps idk if it is as long as you hoped
Answer:
I think the correct answer would be D) to make sure that the story makes sense.
Explanation:
Answer:
he didn't eat rice is the answer may be
The Moloch in "Howl" symbolizes a industrial machine
"Moloch whose mind is pure machinery!"
"Moloch whose skyscrapers stand in the long streets like endless
Jehovahs! Moloch whose factories dream and croak in the fog! Moloch
whose smoke-stacks and antennae crown the cities!"
"Moloch whose love is endless oil and stone! Moloch whose soul is
electricity and banks! . . . Moloch whose fate is a cloud of sexless
hydrogen!"
"Robot apartments! invisible suburbs! skeleton treasuries! blind capitals! demonic industries! spectral nations!"
B. Casey is upset by the townspeople’s anger.
The townspeople being
angry at Casey never quite subsides throughout the majority of the poem.
In fact, it makes its presence known even toward the end of the poem as
Casey comes up to bat in the ninth inning as is evidenced by “A dismal
groan in chorus came; a scowl was on each face |When Casey walked up,
bat in hand, and slowly took his place.” And, readers can tell he is
upset at this in the lines that ensue: “His bloodshot eyes in fury
gleamed, his teeth were clenched in hate; | He gave his cap a vicious
hook and pounded on the plate.”