After having Psyche whipped by Worry and Sadness and then mocking her for conceiving a child in a sham marriage, Venus ordered Psyche to sort out a great mass of mixed wheat, barley, poppyseed, chickpeas, and lentils, and that she must do it by dawn. Venus then goes to a wedding feast, and a kind ant brings several other ants to do the work for her. Angry, Venus gives Psyche a crust of bread. Psyche then learns that Cupid is also in the house, suffering from his injury, sustained when Psyche spilled hot oil on him.
Venus then insists that Psyche cross a river and gather golden wool from some violent sheep belonging to the sun. Intending to drown herself, Psyche receives advice form a divinely inspired reed and gathers the wool caught on briers.
The third task Venus gives Psyche is to collect water from the source of the River Styx in a crystal vial. Jupiter, moved by Psyche's plight, sends his own eagle to do the work for her.
Finally, Venus sends Psyche to the Underworld to get some of Porsopina's beauty. Instructed how to go about this task by the tower from which Psyche was going to fling herself, Psyche retrieves the box from Porsopina, and is barely back in the light of day when she opens the box out of curiosity and ends up in a deep Stygian sleep.
However, by this point, Cupid has healed and escaped his mother's house. He flies to Psyche, revives her, puts the sleep back into the box, and flies Psyche to present the box to Venus.
<span>Jupiter then gives his blessing to the marriage, orders Venus to back off, and gives Psyche some ambrosia, allowing Psyche and Cupid to be wed as equals.</span>
The correct choice would be B. hospitable, hope it helps! Good luck
Answer:
"He stopped, afraid he might blow fire out with a single breath. But the fire was right there and he approached it warily, from a long way off. It took the better part of fifteen minutes before he drew very close indeed to it, and then he stood looking at it from cover. That small motion, the white and red color, a strange fire because it meant a different thing to him
. It was not burning. It was waring. . .He hadn't known fire could look this way. He had never thought in his life that it could give as well as take. Even its smell was different."
Explanation:
It was pretty astonishing that this quote demonstrates how Guy Montag finds what he'd been lacking all along in a small fire he'd created for warmth. Montag had a fascination for destroying everything he could get his hands on by bruning it. But now he was seeing it from a different perspective. He could now see what he had been missing since the beginning. Guy Montag, one of the killers of this, started to understand that burning wasn't the solution, but the problem in this little world surrounded by a belief in killing off knowledge and reality.
Probably small group judging by the other answers . Hope I can help.
Answer: Their land
Explanation:
They were coming to a new land and wanted to colonize and "take over"