b) no matter how fast he runs, the wet feet will freeze harder.
c) he should not have built the fire under the spruce tree.
d) the sight of the dog put a wild idea into his head
B. Thus Fortune with a light / Turn of her wheel brings men from joy to sorrow.
C. He swore to sin no more, until the hour / Of death when at last he was interred, / He recognized God's mercy and his power.
D. And then he saw that of his own perdition / He was sole author and he fled away.
The correct answer is B. Thus Fortune with a light / Turn of her wheel brings men from joy to sorrow.
The Monk's Tale is a bit different from all other plays in the Canterbury Tales - it is rather a collection of very short stories (17 of them) about various characters from literature and history who were played by Fortune. The moral of his story is that fate is fickle, and that you cannot control it. Your destiny decides what will happen to you, and there's nothing you can do about it.
I think that the author decided to begin passage 2 with a description of the city in order to immerse the reader in the environment and the conditions in which babbitts are. The writer only wants to emphasize that a situation in which babbitts are, somehow has a connection with the area in which they are located, that is the city.
The author's decision to start passage 2 with the description of the city is to emphasize the condition in which the Babbitts live.
This refers to the use of vivid descriptions to create a mental image in the minds of a reader.
Hence, we can see that from the complete text, there is the use of imagery to make descriptions of the city and how the Babbitt's conditions truly were.
Read more about imagery here:
#SPJ5
B. memory cells.
C. helper T cells.
D. red blood cells.
The answer is C i just took the test and got it right!