Answer:
Stevenson is saying that when we take a bird’s-eye view, we see everything in a grand perspective. From there, much of what we humans do seems trivial or unimportant. We feel aloof from the rest of humanity, much as Apollo felt when he looked down on humans from atop Mount Olympus. Stevenson likens the man’s Apollo-like view to the pleasure he found in the northern Scottish landscape.
Stevenson used the allusion to Apollo to say that when we look at our experiences from a new perspective, we find unexpected pleasure and experience personal growth. He assumes his readers will be familiar with Apollo and the allusion to him will help them understand his new view of this landscape.
Explanation:
Hope I helped.
There should be options along with the question.
I am going to answer based on what I know. The use of hyperlinks is the element that distinguishes hypermedia from linear multimedia.
The speaker thinks (feels) that her daughter is growing up very fast and uncontrollably, so the speaker feels a wistful feeling towards past years in which her daughter was young and just learning to ride a bike, and the speaker wishes her daughter to remain forever in her chidlike state and never grow up.
Question already asked before :)
"“On the Mode of Communication of Cholera” was a scientific text written by Dr. John Snow in 1855 about the disease cholera. The two primary purposes of this text were to persuade officials and citizens to be more conscious about sanitation, and to inform readers about new ideas about the disease using scientific evidence as support. The answer would be letters A and B."
brainly.com/question/1658712
In Fahrenheit 451, Bradbury uses mythological allusions to represent the veiled corruption in society. These allusions show the irony of how the people yearn for and need knowledge, yet they burn and despise books. ... Not everyone born free and equal, as the Constitution says, but as everyone made equal”