<em>Answer:</em>
<u><em>It Creates Rhythm.</em></u>
<em>Explanation:</em>
Mary Oliver is a Pulitzer Prize-winning poet whose enchanted odes to nature and animal life earned her critical recognition. She´s the author of over 15 poetry and essay collections. She used to write short, direct pieces that resounded of her devotion to the outdoors and hatred of greed.
Answer: Khattam-Shud shows Haroun on the ship that each story in the Ocean requires its own type of poison to properly ruin it, and suggests how one can ruin different types of stories. Iff mutters that to ruin an Ocean of Stories, you add a Khattam-Shud. The Cultmaster continues that each story has an anti-story that cancels the original story out, which he mixes on the ship and pours into the ocean. Haroun, stunned, asks why Khattam-Shud hates stories so much, and says that stories are fun. Khattam Shud replies that the world isn't for fun, it's for controlling. He continues that in each story there is a world he cannot control, which is why he must kill them.
Explanation:
Iff here simplifies Khattam-Shud's explanation, as all that's needed to really end a story is to say it's over. However, Khattam-Shud is working to not just end stories by simply saying they're over, but to make them unappealing to audiences, which will then insure that they won't be told, Silence Laws or not. Think about the ancient stories around the Wellspring; they exist as an example of what happens when stories are deemed boring and not useful.
Answer:
Ophelia, left alone on stage, grieves the loss of Hamlet’s mind and her own misfortune.
Prior to this moment, the king Claudius and Ophelia’s father, Polonius order Ophelia to stop seeing Hamlet as they hide nearby to view his reaction. What follows is one of the most explosive scenes of the play.
Explanation:
Answer:
isolation causes people to feel alone
poor communication leads to misunderstandings
selfishness gets in the way of cooperation
lack of diversity silences different perspectives