Aspects they don’t share
Fiona is portrayed as a very busy and self-assured woman who makes her own decisions in her life. She takes action to get out of the castle rather than waiting for someone to rescue her.
Cinderella is a passive character in the sense that she does nothing to change her situation. Only with the help of Fairy Godmother and marriage to the prince was she able to escape her circumstances.
Yes, I agree you have to look at your own school.
First, ask yourself: is there bullying in your school? (I can give you an example of my school: there wasn't)
Then ask youself: how can you know that there is? what have you seen? have you seen people crying, being beaten, being forced to do something they didn't want to?
And finally, look into the reasons - i can tell you that my school was so small that we all knew each other's parents, so noone would bully someone while knowing their paretns so close.
<u>Similar responses:</u>
- In both the poems the beloved is seen responding to her lover and his love.
- In the first poem, the beloved has no issue with the lover forgetting her and the waves washing her name away. It is the lover who insists on eternalizing their love.
- The nymph too is not moved by all the material gifts given to her by her lover and speaks the truth when she says that if youth was to stay for long she wouldn’t mind being her beloved. Her approach to love is very straightforward and like the beloved in Spenser’s sonnet she is very candid to her lover baring her mind to him.
Answer:
The first two. Just as our national policy in internal affairs and so our national policy in foreign affairs.
Explanation:
Plato