It helps to describe the answers better and the scene
Answer:
a person who solves a code or codes.
Answer:
A courageous hero who answers a call to adventure.
A main character who has to overcome common challenges.
A journey filled with many obstacles.
Supernatural forces, such as gods and monsters, that intervene
Explanation:
- In epic poetry, we can often find one hero who is answering his call to adventure and that adventure is never simple. It has many challenges that hero must survive and often those challenges are something that it is impossible to do. After that, because he is a hero and he had all values, we can see supernatural forces such as gods that are trying to help him to beat everything on his way. His journey is never simple and there are many things that he must follow and pass them.
The correct answer is the following.
The three ways in which the middle adulthood is different form than it was a generation ago are:
1.- Middle adulthood now is more conscious of his responsibility to improve its health. Nowadays the life span has increased and with that, the possibility to live longer with a much better quality of life than 10 years ago.
2.- Middle adulthood now is more responsible of the way he takes care of its money and invests it better than spend it or waste in unnecessary things like happened ten years ago.
3.- Middle adulthood now is more compassionated and respectful to other people. Its emotional changes are not so selfish like in the past. Now, he/she takes into consideration other’s people necessities such as family members or other individuals that somehow are related to him/her.
Poe has a great talent to expose the development of madness in people--a condition not discussed in private or in public during his time. Today, awareness for different mental illnesses is common and often looked upon with compassion. In Poe's day as well as today, however, the process through which a person turns mad is interesting, intense, and suspenseful in and of itself. One might ask how a person gets to the point of overwhelming madness or loss of self-control. Poe uses this curious process as the background for "The Raven."
Along with the use of an intense and confusing scene, Poe uses the techniques of repetition, alliteration and rhythm to bring about the madman's process towards loss of self-control. Words that are repeated often are: "Lenore," the symbol of his emotional pain; "chamber door," the focus of audible irritation; and the bird's unsatisfying response, "Nevermore." Examples of alliteration that create the repetition of maddening sounds are: "While I nodded, nearly napping"; "Perched upon the bust of Pallas"; and, "Startled at the stillness." Finally, the rhythm of the rhyme scheme (trochaic octameter) seems to remind one of a spastic rhythm that can't quite be grasped or understood fully as Poe does not finish some lines' meter but does finish others. Here, Poe creates chaos that the character and reader alike cannot align or make sense of. Through these techniques, confusion and chaos are maintained throughout the drunken period of grief that the main character travels through. The raven then becomes the most confusing symbols of death and chaos in literature as seen through a madman's maddening state of mind.