Answer:
Setting effects to mood and overall plot of the story.
Explanation:
A beach might have a light happy mood with a story of a pirate, or a school field trip. A dark forest might have a knight going to slay a dragon!
Two settings, two moods, two stories.
“It could eat all the streams we know and still be thirsty. Its name is Ou-dis-sun, the Sacred, the Long.”
“Toward the setting of the eighth sun, I came to the banks of the great river.”
I think it's C) sight, taste and hearing. Pouring the milk appealing to sight, sweet milk appealing to taste and uproar appealing to hearing.
Answer:
We see a noteworthy storm before the murder of Caesar. This shows that something tumultuous is about to happen. These are seen as portents from a classical point of view, of which Shakespeare knows. Also we see many things that go against nature - again these are portents that signify that not all is well. So, we see owls in the middle of the day, and lions who walk around Rome casually.
In short, odd things in nature or extreme things in nature are used to show uneasiness.
Explanation: