<span>the treat that Mr.Jones will come back; Each time the animals dare to question an aspect of Napoleon’s regime, Squealer threatens them with Jones’s return. This is doubly threatening to the animals because it would mean another battle that, if lost, would result in a return to their former lifestyle of submission. Jones’s return is such a serious threat that it quashes the animals’ curiosity without fail.</span>
Robert Walton<span> is the captain of a ship traveling to the North Pole. </span>Walton<span> is searching for a Northern passage to the Pacific, and </span>his attitude<span> is one of determination. He is determined to accomplish "some great purpose."</span>
Answer:
They show readers that the speaker once was strong but now is weak.
Explanation:
Elizabeth Barrett Browning's "Sonnet 11" is all about the speaker's attempts at coming to terms with who she really is. Accepting her flaws and the person she is constitutes the core of this poem.
The speaker had always berated herself, thinking low of herself. This poem deals with how she is walking on the path of self acceptance. She is learning, finding the courage to believe in herself and not comparing herself with others. The excerpt provided is taken from the lines 5 till 8, where she tells of how she used to be melancholy and sad, beating herself over her own insecurities. With the allusion to Aornus, Alexander the Great's last seige, she is implying that she has become weak, unable to even compose poems.
In this excerpt from Richard Lovelace's "To Lucasta, Going to the Wars", Lovelace depicts war as an honorable mission.
This depiction of war as an honorable vision can be appreciated in the use of words and images like embracing the tools of war (a sword, a horse, a shield) with a stronger faith. Also, the poetic persona states that he or she loves honour more than the loved one. In this excerpt we appreciate that the speaker states that honour and going to war is more important or more honorable than romantic love