Dear Omar,
I have just visited the all known, "Pe<span>trified Wood Park"! I am writing to you now on behalf of my 'journey'. There was the vast quantity of wood cones! Well, of course those are only for a child's play, but I suppose the sculptures were meant to bring memories of math in the first grade? No, these were trees! Any furniture that was outside, such as picnic tables and benches, were made out of this wonderful wood! Of course there was a museum too! I saw vast sculptures; my favorite was one of a star shape, that you may know of. Oh, and the entrance itself is made out of wood! Wood, wood, wood! Lemmon's Petrified Wood Park is where you'll like to visit next, I am sure of it!
Sincerely,
(Your Name Here)</span>
Cheers to a glass of silk milk,
Dyed with the colors of purple.
Make it like doves and pomegranates,
Get paid with gold and sliver,
The leaves look silverish
Because my birthday
is here, and so is my love
CR
Put your hands over your head if your at school if you are at home go to the nearest part of your house with no windows (like a basement)
<span>The statement which best describes the Green Knight’s chivalric values is: He displays bravery in the face of danger. There are the lines which can support the dominant idea that can be reached throughout the whole poem:
</span><span>The Green Knight takes his stand without lingering
And bends his head a little to show the skin.
He laid his long graceful locks across his crown,
Leaving the naked neck bare and ready.
He has no fear to show, he admits it and he is rough and ready to prove it.</span>
Juliet, like Romeo<span>, makes the transition from an innocent adolescent to responsible adult during the course of the play. In Juliet's case, however, there is a heightened sense that she has been forced to mature too quickly. The emphasis throughout the play on Juliet's youth, despite her growing maturity, establishes her as a tragic heroine.</span>