Hermes put Argos to sleep with his flute.
so "higher education", can keep students, like me, paying up the nose for classes you academically don't need to take..seriously tho, the brain remembers bits n pieces of info. your brain may remember the process of solving the issue.
Answer:
E. Odysseus
Explanation:
<u>One of the epithets which are given to Odysseus in the Odyssey is “the great teller of tales”.</u> The Phaeacians are the ones to call him this because his stories attract the audience and are interesting with many twists. It is also a great story to tell and listen to.
His way of proclaiming the narrative is not straightforward and chronological, but he goes from the middle of the story and tells it in the back, making it more dynamic.
Here we see how he experienced the journey home, as well as get all the details we might have missed.
The prince's first two lines are a use of amplification as he is repeating himself for emphasis. This makes the story more dramatic.
Benvolio uses epithet when he is mentioning that Mercutio is brave. This is because he is listing a quality Mercutio has and is saying it before his name.
Benvolio also seems to be repeating himself when he says noble prince once again when continuing with the details. He didn't have to repeat it over again but it adds emphasis to the story. He also repeats himself once again when describing what occurred but in a less poetic and more serious fashion.
Lady Capulet's grief also adds to the dramatic effect as she lists off the dead man's relations. This appears to be an anaphora when she says "O".
Once again, just like Benvolio has, she repeats what she said earlier except in a more easy to understand and less condensed form. This is only adding more emphasis.
Once again the prince asks what happened to Benvolio. He already asked this at the beginning but he is using more emphasis.
Benvolio speaks to him poetically. However, at the end of this line, it also describes the way he said it and how he postured himself in front of the prince. This is adding more onto the dialogue.
Beyond this point I don't get the rest sorry lol
Answer choices are :
(A) He paused, his eyebrows cocked, and glanced at the coastguard and smiled
(B) The sea-pale eyes of the stranger were focused on nothing
(C) The stranger smiled on, his downward-slanting eyes like empty pit
(D) The stranger stopped eating, smiled
Correct answer choice is :
<h2>C) The stranger smiled on, his downward-slanting eyes like empty pit</h2><h2 /><h2>Explanation:</h2><h2 />
Grendel is a role in the Anglo-Saxon epic poem Beowulf. He is one of the poem's three opponents, all arranged in action to the protagonist Beowulf. Grendel is worried by all but Beowulf. Grendel is represented as dropped from the family of the Biblical character Cain, from Genesis 4 of the Bible.