Answer:
A. Pyramus and Thisbe speak through the wall that separates their houses.
B. Pyramus arrives at the meeting place before Thisbe returns.
C. Thisbe arrives at the meeting place ahead of Pyramus.
Explanation:
These are the three options that happened by chance that affected the outcome of "Pyramus and Thisbe".
Pyramus and Thisbe is a story about two young Babylonia lovers who fall in love with each other but whose families hate each other so they find a way to talk to each other through the wall and when they can no longer bear it, they decide to elope.
The two lovers agree to meet at the mulberry tree but Thisbe arrives before Pyramus and sees a lioness with a bloodied jaw from a recent kill, she assumes the lioness has killed Pyramus, she screams and runs away from the scene.
Shortly after, Pyramus arrives at the meeting place before Thisbe returns and sees the same lioness with bloodied jaw and assumes Thisbe has been devoured by it. In his grief, he kills himself, but before he dies he sees Thisby and discovers she's still alive. Thisby also kills herself.
A; Self discovery occurs in the presence of others.
The best options for this question are D and E.
<span>The jar was gray and bare
It did not give of bird or bush
These </span><span>lines in this excerpt from "Anecdote of the Jar" by Wallace Stevens reflect the themes of barrenness and emptiness in modern life.</span>
<span>-There are tremendous human costs in war.
-The sacrifices made in war are soon forgotten.
The poem personifies grass in a way that it is covering up all of the bodies and causing people to forget important sites of battle where so many people died. In the poem it says "</span>Two years, ten years, and the passengers ask the conductor:
<span> What place is this?" This shows that the grass has grown so much that the people passing by do not even recognize it, and the sacrifices people made there are being forgotten. </span>