Answer:
B. wine
Explanation:
Romantics had a preoccupation with the escape from reality and find solace in nature. Keats too had an obsession with the theme of nature but <em>in this excerpt "Ode to Nightingale", he generates a combination of cheerful and gruesome thoughts by listening to the singing of the nightingale. He discusses the conflicting nature of human life. Thus, </em><u><em>he aspires to have a bottle of wine to get drunk and escape from the reality that exemplifies the fear of death. He wanted to move away from the sufferings of life like growing old and dying. </em></u>However, he wishes to liberate from reality(through wine) yet he returns to the bird(nature) in the preceding lines to find solace in.
By not using any punctuation. I hope this helps:)
Based on the given excerpt above from "The Third Philippic," written by Demosthenes in 342 B.C., in this speech, Demosthenes tries to warn people about an attack on Greece and the statement that best describes Demosthenes's claim is this: <span> Demosthenes warns Athenians not to be naïve and to be prepared for any circumstances. The answer is option B. Hope this helps.</span>
by highlighting the irony of war being sweet and glorious...
i say this because
In the poem he is, in effect, saying that it is anything but sweet and proper to die for one's country in a hideous war that eventually took the lives of over 17 million people.
a paradox is what some in American-lingo will call and oxymoron, namely, an expression that has an statement with a counterintuitive logic.
the harder I work, the more I fall behind.
what the hell? if I work harder, it should be moving ahead, but, that's not the case, I'm falling behind.
so that's a paradox, how can you work harder and fall behind? is counterintuitive, contratry to logic, therefore paradoxical.