I could only imagine that Frisk did it because they were curious or adventurous in spirit. Or it could just be another plot hole.
It certainly can put the wrong idea into the player's head when Frisk can choose to stay with Toriel at the end considering that, at the beginning, you're expected to try to leave the ruins (thus leading to her comment about it, should you choose to stay with her.)
That being said, Frisk's backstory is, most likely, whatever you want it to be - abused child, adventurous spirit, heck, maybe it was just spur of the moment or divine intervention. The backstory is up to our imagination...probably.
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I dont understand your question.
<span>In Emily Dickinson's poem the speaker describes hope as a bird.
</span><span>The stanzas, as in most of Dickinson’s lyrics, rhyme loosely in an ABAB scheme.
</span>The ABAB scheme describes rhyme scheme in which <span>the first and the third line rhyme each other and so do the second and the fourth line.</span>
Correct answer: B
Answer:
metaphor
Explanation:
Metaphors tell what something is
is the rattling of
are swine
Idk but yeah that’s all I know lol