Answer:The excerpt discusses two different views against the disease in Elizabethan times. Simon Forman found a way to fight the disease although it is not a scientific one. Nicholas Bownde, the clerk, however, proposed just a way - not any cure or medicine - to fight the disease which consists of faith in God. The correct answer is the last option - While doctors like Simon Forman tried to help, others such as Nicholas Bownd relied on their faith in God.
Explanation:
Answer:
It is important to be responsible while at school because what you do during that time not only affects your education and your future, it can affect the education and future of others.
Explanation: When you do things in school with obnoxious or unwanted behavior, enough so, that the teacher has to interrupt class to warn you, you take time out of the lesson, which could leave others to have to study more at home, or stay after class to ask a question. Then those who stay after class take up the next class's time and so on and so forth. Along with that, responsibility doesn't just mean behaving, it means doing the work when it needs to be done. Not doing so can wreck your future. Hence, why it is important to always take into account how your behavior and choices have to be considered during a school day, so as to not poorly affect yours or another's future. Hope this helps :)
D- serves as a turning point.
Much of the fear addressed in "The Fall of the House of Usher" is related to decay and death. As the narrator arrives, he contrasts the long-standing, enduring trees with the decayed aspect of the house. Usher appears extremely pale, and the impending death of Madeline dominates the atmosphere in the house and has caused Roderick to lose his mind. The cataleptic condition of Madeline also brings with it repeated death-like experiences, and the fear of a premature burial, another of Poe's topics.
You can follow this trend of thought and illustrate it with those elements and passages in the story that relate to this decay, with its accompanying gloom, and with all those that refer to death and to untimely entombment.