Answer:
I believe that in day to day circumstances, yes. We can control when we brush our teeth and what we put on our toast. Overall though, we cannot control our fate. In most religions and prominently in greek myths, fate is something higher you cant control. When someone tries to control there fate that is when they often make the worst happen. Fate is what will happen and cannot be persuaded or changed at all.
Hope this helped.
This quote means that when bees and flies eat inside from fruit, they drone (buzz), which gets increasingly louder. It also implies that this droning (buzzing) sounds somewhat musical as it becomes louder by comparing it to the sound of a lute, which is an instrument.
Answer:
bind him but let him hear the Sirens' music
Explanation:
it is what it is...
<span>This is a perfect example of an archetypal quest. The main character is a hero has an important mission that brings him into a different world. In a quest, the hero is an ordinary fellow that the reader can relate to, but who has hidden strengths that make him ideally suited. It is usually stated or implied that he is fated to complete this quest. He fights against obstacles and there may be loss and tragedy along the way, but in the end, goodness and his cause always prevail.</span>