Answer:
I personally believe its because of the darkness these places tend to have. A person is not necessarily scared of the dark they're scared of whats in the dark. It could be anything really.
Hope it helps. :)
Answer:
C. They make an analogy between children outgrowing playing with valuables and children outgrowing playing with toys.
Explanation:
The specifics of the Utopians' approach to priceless objects are stated via an analogy between the natural progression of childhood and the abandonment of play with priceless objects and other forms of entertainment.
Answer:
are there any answer choices?
Explanation:
Answer:
A. "Sonnet XV," by Maximilian Voloshin
Explanation:
Maximilian Voloshin was a poet, born in Russia in the mid 1870´s, he was one of the greatest representants of the russian simbolist school, and he wrote Sonnet XV a sonnet that as you can infere from the name has 14 verses, and falong with other poems forms the document "Lunaria" Sonnet XV is an ode to the moon, as you can see right form the first line:
<em>"Pure pearl of silence brooding on the sky,"</em>
That´s why the answer is "Sonnet XV" by Miximilian Voloshin.
Answer:
"An unstable compound of two parts god and one part man, Gilgamesh suffers most from immoderation. He is the greatest of all men, and both his virtues and his flaws are outsized. He is the fiercest of warriors and the most ambitious of builders. Yet until Enkidu, his near equal, arrives to serve as a counterweight to Gilgamesh’s restless energies, he exhausts his subjects with ceaseless battle, forced labor, and arbitrary exercises of power. Beautiful to behold, Gilgamesh selfishly indulges his appetites, raping whatever woman he desires, whether she is the wife of a warrior or the daughter of a noble—or a bride on her wedding night. Enkidu’s friendship calms and focuses him. When Enkidu dies, Gilgamesh grieves deeply and is horrified by the prospect of his own death. Abruptly abandoning glory, wealth, and power, all of which are worldly aspirations that he as king had once epitomized, he begins a quest to learn the secret of eternal life. What he finds instead is the wisdom to strike harmony with his divine and mortal attributes. Reconciled at last to his mortality, Gilgamesh resumes his proper place in the world and becomes a better king." -Sparknotes: The Epic of Gilgamesh