Ozymandias- he thinks of himself as the big shot. He boasts about his work(look upon my works and ur might despair). Ozymandias has this aroma of arrogance on his pedestal he proclaims to be the (king of kings) and warns other rulers or his enemies to be sad-(despair).
He thought that the statue and his work will forever immortalise him and he shall be the king of kings but now it's all just a (colossal wreck) all the power he might have once had, all his accomplishments are now (lone and level) - this suggests that he is no longer a feared ruler but just a pile of rubble in the middle of nowhere.
The whole poem it self is mocking ozymandias that his work is no longer there his is no longer the King of kings.
The chaos of the scene means Dante thinks of heretics' thoughts and behavior as illogical.
Answer:
make more noticeable or prominent.
Explanation:
EXAMPLE: transitive verb. : to make (something) more prominent or noticeable : accent, emphasize With her hair in tight curls that accentuate her pale beauty, she seems lit from within.— Peter Travers trying to accentuate the positive aspects of the program also : intensify accentuates the feeling of despair.
According to this excerpt from Walden, in which subject area did the transcendentalist thinker Thoreau most likely find his inspiration?
B.nature
The correct answer is B. Wiesel uses rhetorical questions to encourage the audience to continue to think about his ideas
Explanation:
The excerpt presented belongs to a speech known as "the Perils of Indifference" by Elie Wiesel who was a survivor of the Holocaust and an important author in the topic. In the excerpt presented, Wiesel refers to the indifference and the importance of learning from the past.
To explain this, the main technique Wiesel uses is rhetorical questions that are questions not intended to be answered by the audience but that encourages the audience to reflect and think about the ideas. For example, the rhetorical question "Have we really learned from our experiences? " makes the audience think about whether atrocities such as the Holocaust can occur again or the question "Has the human being become less indifferent and more human?" that questions the indifference in human societies.