I will try my best is I can’t so please don’t mind
Answer:
<em>Smart lad, to slip betimes away
</em>
<em>From fields where glory does not stay,
</em>
<em>And early though the laurel grows
</em>
<em>It withers quicker than the rose.</em>
Explanation:
A. E. Housman's elegy "To an Athlete Dying Young" talks of the mortality of man and how everything is insignificant in front of death. The poem deals with the themes of victory, death, transience, youth, etc.
From the first four stanzas of the poem, the third stanza emphasizes temporary fame and prestige. In this stanza, the speaker reveals how<em> "glory does not stay" </em>and <em>"though the laurel grows, it withers quicker than the rose." </em>These two lines seem to signal the temporary nature of fame and prestige, which all seem insignificant and useless when a person dies.
Answer:
The story is set in New England in the eighteenth century, a time when
people there were particularly superstitious about evil.
Answer:
B,
Explanation:
There was a lot of words in there that would probably be easier for someone to understand if they would know a simpler definition. Hope this helps, have a nice day!! :D
Uhh... what squirrel..?
When squirrels look at any mammal larger than them, they feel threatened. A squirrel will rarely think of you as a friend.
Squirrels are also known to have diseases, so if you come across a squirrel who is giving you a weird look, walk away. They bite.