Answer:
The character that says these words is Satan. He is speaking to the other fallen angels.
Explanation:
Before these lines begin, it is said that Satan is going to say the following words "whereto with speedy words th' Arch-fiend repli'd." The "arch-fiend" is like a super enemy, arch (means superior) fiend (enemy).
Two of the main phrases that prove that Satan is talking are the following:
- "<em>To do aught good never will be our task, But ever to do ill our sole delight" </em>= Doing good action will never be our thing, we only find pleasure in doing bad things.
- <em>"As being the contrary to his high will whom we resist"</em> = since we are the contrary of God, the one we resist.
<span>This is of course somewhat of a subjective question, but one piece of advice you could give to this group would be to delegate some tasks of organization to other people. </span>
It suggests
that artificial technologies will develop the ability to reason. After a period
of Internet growth, programmers will refine the Internet by adding
intelligence. by presenting a metaphor of a dirt road being paved, and it is Internet
search engine.
Your mouse is on the correct answer
everyone else just helped with the book in some way
Answer:
The words written in line 4 reveals that Ozymandias was a haughty and commanding sneer.
Explanation:
"Ozymandias" is a poem written by P. B. Shelley. The poem is about a statue of Ozymandias.
In the poem, the speaker describes the statue's face as 'frowned, wrinkled lips, and sneer of cold command.' This description reveals that Ozymandias was a haughty and commanding sneer. The facial expressions of the statue depicts that Ozymandias was a passionate commander.