The phrase “A glooming peace this morning with it brings. The sun for sorrow will not show his head. ” it is spoken by the prince at the end of "Romeu e J *", after all the deaths caused directly or indirectly, by the enmity of the Capuleto and Monteschio families.
After the death of the two young people, the families showed how the enmity between them was malefic and ended up affecting the lives of those who just wanted to love, they then decide to end this enmity and make peace, in the name of those who are gone. The prince then affirms that that morning, it sealed peace between the families, but it was a dark, sad and melancholy peace, since it was necessary for a tragedy to happen for it to be sealed. This peace was so sad, that not even the sun celebrated it, but it hid, leaving the cold climate and showing the sadness in the hearts of the characters.
A) It is important to preserve the oral tradition of the Kiowa people.
"Life on the ranch" is a fragment. It is a part of a sentence that may contain a subject and/or a verb but does not complete a thought.
"Life on the ranch" raises the question what about the life on the ranch?
For the fragment to be a simple sentence, we must add a verb and other modifiers to complete the thought.
Life on the ranch is interesting.
<span>1.</span>The
correct answer here would be the second
option. An epic is a longer narrative poem that chronicles the life and exploits
of famous cultural heroes. Homer’s Odyssey, Beowulf from England, Vergil’s
Aeneid are all examples of epic narratives.
<span>2.</span>The
correct answer here is the third option.
“Him” is a personal pronoun in the objective case here. Personal pronouns are used
to represent either people or things and the objective case is for the nouns or
the pronouns when in the sentence they function as an object.
<span>3.</span>The
correct answer here is to fuel. This
is a synonym for the word “stoke” and in this case, it means “to fuel” something
like fire. This word is used in order to give power to the sentence because “stoke”
is often used with fire, where you stoke the fire to make it stronger and bigger
and here the poet wants to evoke that image.
<span />