Answer:
C.) That nature powers over the strongest of human knowledge.
Explanation:
Poe incorporated the bust of Athena into "The Raven" because "Pallas" roughly translates into maiden. The narrator describes Lenore as a "rare and radiant maiden". I believe that the bust if Athena"(bust of Pallas) is a reminder of Lenore. It is important that the raven is perched on the bust because Pallas Atgena was a Greek goddess of wisdom, and it suggest that the bird itself may be wise.
The metaphor is the literary devices that compares two unrelated thing using implied language, the comparison does not use the words “like” or “as” to compare instead the similitude between the object is implicit, when Bart Edelman says “petroleum morgue” we get the picture of dark morgue like petroleum. The answer is metaphor.
Answer:
This is the management of offenders in the community who have already been convicted. Community corrections are an alternative to imprisonment (schamalleger, 2011). Offenders report regularly to their community officers and may be forced to participate in unpaid community work and rehabilitation programs ("community corrections"). The community corrections include probation, parole and pretrial supervision. Probation entails the release of an offender to the community under supervision, parole is the conditional supervised release from jail and pretrial supervision is the close monitoring of an individual before trial. Community correction plays a major role in ensuring safety of the community by diverting low-risk offenders. It shifts the burden of corrections from institutions to communities. This reduces operational costs of such facilities by reducing the number of prisoners in them. This translates to less tax being paid by the citizens to run such facilities. Community corrections also breaks the cycle of reoffending by developing the offenders capabilities and treating those with problems such as personality disorders. This promotes overall safety of the community by breaking the cycle of crime. Training the individuals also prevent them from being dependent on others and therefore give them alternative sources of income.
Explanation:
A violent storm rages around a small ship at sea. The master of the ship calls for his boatswain to rouse the mariners to action and prevent the ship from being run aground by the tempest. Chaos ensues. Some mariners enter, followed by a group of nobles comprised of Alonso, King of Naples, Sebastian, his brother, Antonio, Gonzalo, and others. We do not learn these men’s names in this scene, nor do we learn (as we finally do in Act II, scene i) that they have just come from Tunis, in Africa, where Alonso’s daughter, Claribel, has been married to the prince. As the Boatswain and his crew take in the topsail and the topmast, Alonso and his party are merely underfoot, and the Boatswain tells them to get below-decks. Gonzalo reminds the Boatswain that one of the passengers is of some importance, but the Boatswain is unmoved. He will do what he has to in order to save the ship, regardless of who is aboard.
Answer:
//encourage or stir up (violent or unlawful behavior)
//urge or persuade (someone) to act in a violent or unlawful way.