a) To live without having to work
Explanation:
<u>The two friends, George and the half witted Lennie here are fantasizing abut living a life in which they do not have to work and have plenty in their lives. </u>
This fantasy reveals that they are tired of going around town finding work and then getting scraps to eat, t<u>he vagabond life has taken a toll on them and they want to settle down in one place</u> where they will have plenty to eat and no worries about food without having to work for it all the time.
In acts 1 and 2 of Julius Caesar, Brutus is in conflict with himself.
In the soliloquy in Act 2 Scene 1 in the tragedy of Julius Caesar explains Brutus' involvement in the assassination plot against Ceasar as he thinks about the consequences if Caesar is crowned. He compares the crowning procedure of Caesar to that of the hatching of a serpent from the egg. He assumes that when Caesar would become the king of Rome he will show his cruel nature and bring destruction to the people of Rome. Hence, Brutus joins the conspiracy against Caesar in order to prevent Rome from the ambitious nature of Caesar in the coming future.
Answer:
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Explanation:
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James Fenimore Cooper
Many of Cooper's writings focused on the American frontier. He often wrote about Native American life especially in his Leatherstocking Tales. He also wrote sea novels as well as the historical novel "History of the Navy of the United States of America".
Mark Twain is well-known for his writing about American life, but not for introducing the sea. He did introduce the Mississippi River. Herman Melville is most widely known for introducing the sea in his novel, Moby D__.
Answer:
The three scaffold scenes in The Scarlet Letter are integral to the structure and unity of the narrative. They are the most dramatic scenes at the beginning, in the middle, and at the end of the novel. Artistically and dramatically, these scenes are at the very core of Hawthorne's tale of crime and punishment.
Explanation: