Read the excerpt from My Story. She took me up a flight of stairs (the cells were on the second level), through a door covered with iron mesh, and along a dimly lighted corridor. She placed me in an empty dark cell and slammed the door closed. She walked a few steps away, but then she turned around and came back. She said, "There are two girls around the other side, and if you want to go over there with them instead of being in a cell by yourself, I will take you over there.” I told her that it didn’t matter, but she said, "Let’s go around there, and then you won’t have to be in a cell alone.” It was her way of being nice. It didn’t make me feel any better. How does Rosa Parks help the reader understand her emotions in this excerpt? by describing in detail the order of what happened to her by comparing her feelings to those of other prisoners she met by sharing the exact dimensions of the prison cell she was put in by explaining how her feelings were expressed as pain in her body
Because they just do !!!!! Now give me my answer now !!!!!
One species(the parasite) benefits while the other species (the host) is harmed
This question is incomplete. Here's the complete question.
Literary History: The Epic and the Epic Hero, by McGraw-Hill Education.
People are living in fear as an evil force threatens to destroy the land. Then a hero appears. Brave, strong, and good, the hero defeats the evil force and saves the land and its people. You know this story well. It is one of the most widely told stories in literature, as well as one of the oldest. In times past, the deeds of the hero were told in the form of an epic—a long narrative poem that recounts, in formal language, the exploits of a heroic figure from legend, religion, or history. Ancient epic poets and their audiences viewed their epics as records of their peoples’ early histories.
Based on the first paragraph, what is the relationship between epics and the earliest history of the societies that produced the epic?
Answer:
Epic poetry serves as an early historical record of the societies that produced it.
Explanation:
The paragraph explains that epic poetry formally narrates stories of heroic figures from legends, religious ideas, and even history. Furthermore, in a succeeding paragraph the use of epics a resource for historians and anthropologists to better understand the culture of societies under study.