<span>The sentence that correctly describes an ode is that It's written in homage to a person, idea, or an object. For example, John Keats wrote Ode to Psyche, in honor of a person, and Ode on Melancholy, in honor of an idea, and Ode on a Grecian Urn, in honor of an object. Odes exist since the ancient times, so they aren't just medieval poems. Heroic expoits are described in epics, not odes. Tragic incidents are written in elegies. </span>
1. French Revolution
2. WWI begins.
3. Russian Civil War
4. Bolsheviks take control
5. Tsar executed.
6. Treaty is signed
Shakespeare further develops the ideas of revenge and action vs. inaction in lines 607–616. Hamlet speaks being “prompted to [his] revenge by heaven and hell” line 613and yet he continues to talk or “unpack
<span>A) The speaker is describing a scene in the third person as a sentimental observer.
The speaker is describing the event in third person, but it seems clear that he is somehow connected to the event. The sentimental tone of the description puts him in a closer position to the people, and it seems like he is observing with some emotional attachment. </span>
On the second problem, it would most likely be A