Answer:
The technique used by Alexander Pope in The R*pe of the Lock is mock-epic genre.
Explanation:
"The Ra-pe of the Lock" is a mock-epic (a technique used by Pope) poem written by Alexander Pope. Pope has written the verse in heroic couplets.
Pope named his poem as "an heroi-comical poem".
Mock-epic is a form of satire in which trivial matters or subjects are dealt in an elevated heroic style. <u>This dealing of the trivial matters in a heroic style creates the humor in this technique of mock-epic</u>. This genre does not mock the epics but rather the subject by giving it a form of epic.
<u>The poem deals with a true incident of trivial matter; the stolen locks of a young woman. Because of this conflict between two families started, which Pope resembled that of the war of Greeks and Trojan. </u>
Answer:
C)
Explanation:
By the second sentence, we can tell that Lydia may look disheveled, but to the narrator, she seemed elegantly in her element. To most people, when someone gets out of the water their hair is all over the place and they look tired and with wrinkly clothes. To the narrator Lydia was different, they describe her as being one with the ocean. To the narrator this bond with the ocean makes gives her a type of elegance when she is close to it and/or comes out of the water.
The answer would be B.) Workplace writing avoids addressing important points and facts directly.
The reason being is because this answer would be a good setting to think or write, however the other answers would not be appropriate.
The answer is C. Back then, people who lived on the streets were put in prison, and weren't offered anywhere else to live.<span />
Answer:
Crito was there to try to persuade Socrates to escape from the prison where he is awaiting execution.
Explanation:
Socrates was accused of "corrupting the young" and "impiety" by the people of Athens and kept imprisoned awaiting execution by Hemlock poisoning. One of his friends, Crito, a rich wealthy Athenian visits him the day before he was to be killed. He had already bribed the guards and even made ready a boat for his escape to another town. But Socrates refused, saying that even though his charge wasn't right, he doesn't have to pay back evil for evil, in his case wrong for wrong. "Two wrongs doesn't make a right". Injustice should not be answered with injustice. So, he'll happily accept the verdict of the people of Athens and be executed.