Answer:
1.- Cicones: D. people whose holy city was raided by Odysseus's men
2.- Laestrygonians: H. giants that devour Odysseus's fleet.
3.- Scylla: B: victim of Circe's spell.
4.- Tiresias: I: person who twice hit mating snakes with a stick.
5.- Hermes: F: Person who gave Odysseus advice about a woman
6.- Sisyphus: A: Clever boulder pusher
7.- Tityus: G: One famously unable to resist temptation
8.- Charybdis: E: whirlpool monster
9.- Sirens: C: musicians who lost an important contest to the muses
Explanation: The explanation is above since each character has a brief description.
<h2>Walt Whiteman's Rhetoric </h2>
Whitman spoke of the war from a soldier's point of view. Whitman attempted to change the reader's name from one based on inactive and divisive ideas. Those of the ideas are race, class, region, and gender to a flexible character based on the works of the human body.
I explain how this oratorical poetics is the result of a number of factors which includes the kind of characters poetry acted in early nineteenth-century American society, the economics of the publishing trade, the fragmentation of the two-party arrangement, and nineteenth-century rhetorical art, and that a thoughtful examination. The junction of Whitman and these parts shows the construction of this rhetorical poetic.
The Most Dangerous Game Summary. In "The Most Dangerous Game," hunter Sanger Rainsford washes up on the shore of an island. He meets General Zaroff, who hunts human beings ("the most dangerous game<span>") for sport. Zaroff hunts Rainsford, but in the end Rainsford gets the better of him.</span><span />
Answer:
im no7 going to do the essay but i'll give you the main points. (If you want to have all your spelling and grammar correct use 6ammarly)
Explanation:
Do our struggles define us ?
Yes. Because when we go through struggles it can bring out the best or worst of us. Also when we go through struggles our perspectives can change and so can our personality.
Example: When someone has a rough childhood they start to distance themselves from others or they simply don't trust people. They start to develop a personality that isn't as great, why? Because of their struggles.
Would people be truly happy without adversity ?
Yes. People hate adversity, and although it can define us, it's still c*ap.
After the death of Tea Cake, Janie returns to Eatonville changed. She wants the other women to see her and she wants to tell Phoeby her story for "meaning depends upon sharing" as Joseph Conrad wrote.