Answer:
B The narrator is reliable because he describes how much he loved animals when he was a young man.
According to Michael Meister's introduction to The Inferno, Dante's story still has a powerful effect on its readers hundreds of years after its creation because of C- it deals with the human struggle with good and evil found within every person, which is still a struggle today. The fight against evil has been a universal theme in literature and still today it relates with every and any person whether religious or not.
Michael Meister wrote the foreword to Dante´s inferno published in 2007. Meister, who is a priest, points out that the Dante´s vision is so powerful that it affects readers even today.
Answer:
I don’t know what I was doing
Explanation:
The answer is C. When she was forty years old
The correct answer is option letter E (He burnt un’wares his wings, and cannot fly away). Taken from the sonnet sequence “<em>Astrophel and Stella</em>” by Philip Sidney (1591), Sonnet 8 narrates the moment when Cupid travelled to England from his native home in Greece, since Greece has fallen under control of the Ottoman Empire. Cupid felt cold in this new territory and as soon as he saw <u>Stella's brilliant face</u>, he thought it was a source of heat, but it was not. Instead, her face was like “<em>like morning sun on snow</em>”, that is, it was bright but cold. The best line in the poem that describes the poetic speaker hopelessly in love is the one in letter E, since this option describes <u>how Cupid's wings were burnt by the flames of Astrophel's desire for Stella</u>. This event leaves Astrophel hopeless and uncertain of Stella’s capacity of loving, after Cupid's best efforts to live in her face.