Answer:
The expected outcome of the scene was that the rioters would meet a monstrous being "Death" but instead, they found gold.
Explanation:
Geoffrey Chaucer's "The Canterbury Tales" is a collection of stories told by the traveling pilgrims to Canterbury. One of them was a pardoner who tells the story of the three rioters and their greed.
In "<em>The Pardoner's Tale</em>", three rioters who had done nothing except revel and drink and enjoy were told by one of their servants that his relative had been killed by Death. In drunken anger, they went in search of this person. On the way, they met an old man who told them he's been waiting for Death, and he's just left him under an oak tree. When they reached there, they found no one but instead found eight bushels of gold coins. This is ironic as the expected result will either be a beast or anything that will personify death but instead gold greeted them. Also, it is ironic as this discovery will lead to their deaths later on.
Answer:
challengelisteners to think about how they act in the world.
make listeners feel good about how children in the world are taught.
Explanation:
hope this hepls
He embodies fate by insisting that the prophecy will still
come true. He still warns Caesar of
danger but Caesar brushes it off. He
tries to pass a note to him but is blocked by the Conspirators who now crowd
around Caesar as he enters the hall and there he met his end.
<span>Mentor : old friend of Odysseus
Eurynomous : a suitor of Penelope (a netherland or underword spirit);</span><span>he third son of Aigyptios and kin to Antiphos</span><span>
Halitherses : a seer who calls the eagle sighting an omen of Odysseus's return
Eurycleia : the only servant that knows of Telemachus's voyage; </span><span> servant in the household of Odysseus and took care of him and his son</span><span>
Aegyptius : father of Eurynomous</span>