Answer:
Explanation:
The subtle use of language in "I have come after them and made repair" (line 6) indicates that this is a regular occurrence. The hunters have destroyed sections of the stone wall in the selfish pursuit of their prey and apparently without concern for the landowners, who must work to repair the wall each spring.
Im pretty sure the answer is light and humerous
The answer is D. unwilling
Your question is incomplete because it does not include the options, which are the following:
Both authors describe Sir Bedivere's sorrow.
Both authors describe Sir Bedivere in tears.
Both authors describe Sir Bedivere's resolve.
Both authors describe the approaching dawn.
Answer:
Both authors describe Sir Bedivere's sorrow.
Explanation:
Both excerpts depict the moment that dying King Arthur leaves on a barge hoping to be healed on the isle of Avalon. In Sir Thomas Malory's lines, Sir Bedivere moans and gives a cry of grief as the barge disappears. Similarly, Lord Tennyson's passage demonstrates Sir Bedivere's pain and loyalty as he stands watching the the main body of the barge until it becomes a black dot in the distance.
Answer:
He wore a big turban and loose fitting cloths . his long , white beard covered the best part of his chest and he looked at least a hundred years old. The author's grandfather seemed to have the look of a man who neither had a wife nor children , only lots and lots of grandchildren because he looked that old .
Explanation:
.
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#hope it helps you..
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