Answer:
D. The beauty of the everyday and the importance of small rituals
Explanation:
Making a tee doesn't seem as much of a problem or a task that takes a big effort.
However, in this story, we see this old man passionately and carefully completing this everyday task. He carefully opens his teacups set, carefully calculates the amount of tea needed, peacefully waits for the water to boil, enjoys the smell of the tee and finally shares cup of tea with his wife enjoying in the time they spent together.
This process could've been done in a much faster pace, more hectically, doing something else simultaneously, and the result would've been the same - a cup of tea with his wife.
But, by showing us all these small rituals and careful preparation, this story conveys the importance of enjoying small, everyday things and helps us see the beauty in them.
Answer:is that the full question
Explanation:
The poet says about the poetry that poem should be read slowly and understood well over a period of time.
<u>Explanation:</u>
The poem "Unfolding bud" has been written by a Japanese poet whose name is Naoshi Koriyama. The poem compares the growing and the flowering of a water lily to the process of the understanding of a poem.
The poet in this poem says that it is very important that in order to understand the poem well, the poem should be read slowly and understood over a period of time.
Answer:
It is wise to know the enemy you face
Explanation:
According to the excerpt, Odyssey and his crew made an ignorant assumption that the Cyclops should honor their guests.
Little did King Odysseus realize that he had an entirely way of thinking and culture from the Cyclops. He tells Polyphemus, a Cyclop that he entreats him to <u>"have a care for the gods' courtesy.</u>.." and that <u>"Zeus will avenge the unoffending guest".</u>
Polyphemus replies that he <u>"care not a whistle for your thundering Zeus"</u> because the Cyclops had no regards for the gods as they believed themselves more powerful.
The theme of the conflict is that It is wise to know the enemy you face.