Answer:
<h3>his experiences.</h3>
Explanation:
- When Milo meets Alec Bings in the Forest of Sigh, the boy explains how everyone in his family remains at the same height while only their legs keep on growing towards the ground.
- However, unlike them, Milo grows taller upwards and that indicates how at different heights Milo would see a whole new different perspective of experiences in life.
- Thus, Milo's journey in the Land of Beyond truly changes his attitude towards learning and helps him learn a great lesson about the importance of perspective in life.
A bias because it’s only his opinion someone else can have a different one
Answer: "The Wives of the Dead" is a chilling and somber tale of shared grief in the early days of the American colonies, full of soul-shattering imagery and the use of "dream-logic" which makes the story very ahead of its time
Explanation: The imagery is actually quite similar between the experiences of the two sisters-in-law. In both cases there is a knock at the door and a man appears to announce the news that their respective husbands, contrary to the previous reports, are alive. The first sister-in-law, Margaret, however, receives the word from Goodman Parker, a well-dressed man in a "broad-brimmed hat and a blanket coat," while the other messenger, telling the news about Mary's husband
Answer:
Spoken by Macbeth in Act V scene v, after Seyton brought the news of Lady Macbeth's death, implying at the meaninglessness of one's life.
Explanation:
These lines are a quote from the tragedy play "Macbeth" by William Shakespeare. Taken from Act V scene v, these words are said by Macbeth after he hears of the death of his wife, lady Macbeth.
Macbeth at first seemed to be shaken with the news brought by Seyton that "the queen, my lord, is dead." But then, Macbeth began talking of the inevitability of death for everyone. He accepts that "she should have died hereafter", and that "Life’s but a walking shadow, a poor player/ That struts and frets his hour upon the stage
/ And then is heard no more. It is a tale
/ Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,
/ Signifying nothing." This could also be taken as his acceptance of the meaninglessness of human life, which also indirectly made his act of murdering King Duncan an insignificant act. He is in a way, justifying his murderous acts and seems to imply their insignificance. After all, life is just a shadow cast by a brief candle.