Answer:
I think it’s A. sometimes I can hardly read my own handwriting
Answer:
A lol
Explanation:
no more shouting now. What a fine thing it is to listen to such a bard as we have here
the man sings like a god." *
Answer: Telemachus is the one who says: "[F]or this evening let us dine and take our pleasure, no more shouting now. What a fine thing it is to listen to such a bard as we have here the man sings like a god".
Explanation: In The Odyssey, Telemachus is Odysseus and Penelope's son. Moreover, he is the one who confronts her mother's suitors while Odysseus is far away from home. In that way, he pronounces those words ("[F]or this evening let us dine and take our pleasure, no more shouting now. What a fine thing it is to listen to such a bard as we have here the man sings like a god") when he is speaking at the suitors, who appear at Odysseus's home to eat all of the food as well as to see Penelope and ask for her hand in marriage.
Answer:
Explanation:
The apparition of Banquo's ghost affects Macbeth deeply and significantly. Macbeth as the king is now to enjoy the pleasures of his throne, however, whether it be his conscience or his mere madness, he deals with ghostly images of his past beloved friend and causes him moral pain. He found the destiny that he created out of the three witches' prophecies and in order to do that the noble Macbeth we see at the beginning of the play turns into a corrupt man in the course of the play who even Hecate, the goddess of witchcraft, sees that Macbeth is a wicked king who "loves for his own ends" in spite of all the harm that he causes to others.
Under my bed were—three boxes of old clothes.
B.
The story begins like this—ouch! What just fell on my head?
C.
That tree—the one in the back corner of the yard, is the first to bloom in spring.
D.
You need to beat—the eggs, add the milk, and stir in the pumpkin.
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