That’s one rule you can search up the passage and look for context clue in it.
I think the excerpt you are talking about is...
"Dantès entered the second grotto. The second grotto was lower and more gloomy than the first; the air that could only enter by the newly formed opening had the mephitic smell Dantès was surprised not to find in the outer cavern. He waited in order to allow pure air to displace the foul atmosphere, and then went on." from The Court of Monte Cristo.
A synonym or the word grotto could be cave/cavern. Hope this helps!
The sequence of events is triggered by the killing of Polonius
is:
1. Hamlet being exiled by Claudius,
2. Laertes returns to avenge his
father, Polonius,
3. pirates attack Hamlet’s ship and he returns home,
4.
Ophelia commits suicide.
In Shakespeare’s tragedy “Hamlet”, killing of Polonius
triggers a series of events with are tied up at the end of tragedy. After
Hamlet kills Polonius, thinking that he is Claudius, he is been sent to exile
to be murdered. But, Hamlet knows of this plan and when the ship is being
attacked by the pirates he survives and returns home. Meanwhile, Laertes comes
home from Paris to avenge his father with intention of killing Hamlet in a
duel. This series of events makes Ophelia go insane and she commits a suicide
drowning in a river.
Emily Dickenson was certainly the queen of all observant poetry. She writes very much from what she sees around her. Much of it is unique to her own quite external life. The details about the Sabbath are engaging. She listens to God's sermons through the nature around her: Orchids and birds deliver what God has to say. She concludes that by observant of God's Creation she does need to yearn for heaven. She's already there. If she speaks in first person, we know what she sees and what it means to her, but most of all we knows how she thinks about herself and the life around her. What she lives vibrates with internal power.
In I could not stop for death, the same sort of thing is going on. Each detail shows a path that could be taken with death leading on. She sees death as a singular servant taking her in a carriage that is headed into eternity. These are not idle thoughts. There the internal things she feels from what she sees. We are drawn into the things that mean the very most to her.
Answer:The answer- Then we set up our tent and unrolled our sleeping bags inside.
Explanation: I have just took the test.