<span>they pick through their belongings deciding what few things can be taken and what must be left behind or sold
In Chapter 9, the tenant people are forced to pick through their belongings. They must select only a few items to take with them on the journey out West. Everything else must be left behind or sold. The hagglers that come to purchase these items take the items at face value and do not realize that they are bartering for the tenant farmer's dignity, their family history, their most precious keepsakes, and in essence their former lives.</span>
Answer:
(1)
movements and actions of the tiger in the cage
stalking
ignoring
starting hearing
movements and actions of the tiger in the wild
lurking
sliding
snarling
baring
terrorizing
2)
places in the cage
pads of velvet quiet
concrete cell
behind bars
places in the wild
water hole
tall grass
jungle's edge
Explanation:
In Ovid's "Metamorphoses", gods are responsible for altering the physical forms of earthly creatures. Ovid doesn't state it in the introductory lines, but the epic itself makes it clear that gods do it almost whimsically, of their own accord and for their own purposes. Kafka never says who transformed Gregor into a vermin. He even uses a passive construction: Gregor "found himself transformed in his bed into a horrible vermin". A faceless, nameless force seems to be responsible for this unexpected occurrence. Kafka makes it look almost absurd, as Gregor's world is all too real, so no gods or any supernatural force can be involved. However different the two works are, one thing is similar - people are completely powerless and helpless. All they can do is to suffer or annihilate themselves.