<span>That is a difficult one because Christian believes and Beowulf is a matter of interpretation. What one may view as sensibility is actually just a matter of common sense. However, every aspect of life is covered in the Bible and thus to suggest (if this is what you are suggesting) Beowulf is explained taking Christian values into consideration? No. Things were different at that time and thus the perceived sensibility to Christian belief</span>
Tattoos should not be band in some work places because some tattoos may signify a loss of someone you loved or something you loved
The correct answer is that these lines talk about the immortality of art.
Ode on a Grecian Urn by John Keats is often interpreted as the celebration of art and its immortality. The figures depicted on the urn have passed long before the narrator examines the urn on which their lives were depicted. Even though they perished their story has been preserved on the urn, and in a sense they have become immortal through the art, which is that which remains long after we are gone.
Answer:
I'm not sure about the page numbers, specifically, but I can give you a few examples of violence in the book to give you an idea of where in the book to look :)
Explanation:
When Ponyboy is jumped by the Soc's in the very beginning of the book, (just a few pages in), the several rumbles initiated by the gang, when Johnny and Ponyboy are getting beat up in the park, when Johnny kills the Soc, the rumble the gang goes to for Johnny after he dies in the hospital, when Dally is shot by the cops, and that's all I remember, though I'm sure there is more :)
I hope this helped though!!
Answer: A
Explanation: In the play Cassius describes Caesar as a God: “He had a fever when he was in Spain, and when the fit was on him, I did mark how he did shake: 'tis true, this god did shake; his coward lips did from their colour fly…”