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zheka24 [161]
2 years ago
7

How does Homer foreshadow Odysseus’s pride during the games in Scheria?

English
1 answer:
Leona [35]2 years ago
5 0
During the games in scheria odysseus identifies himself to the audience stating that his fame has reached the skies. it was not pride that caused him to do this. His pride was foreshadowed by the culture of the Homeric world.
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The right answer is:

Theoclymenus

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Commonlit: Advice to the newly married lady
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Answer and Explanation:

"Advice to the Newly Married Lady" was written by Samuel K. Jennings (1771–1854). He offers pieces of advice to women as to help them secure happiness in their marriages. According to Jennings, while a man has other sources of happiness and fun, a woman only has her house and husband to look forward to, which is why she should make great effort to please her man:

<em>His engagements as a man, will  necessarily keep up his attention. He will have frequent occasion to mix with agreeable and interesting  company. [...] He of course will have an  asylum, should home become tiresome or disagreeable. But your house is your only refuge, your  husband your only companion. Should he abandon you, solitude, anxiety and tears, must be your  unhappy lot.</em>

Jennings goes on to say the woman should be completely submissive and obedient to her husband. She should try her best to stay on his good side, for he is superior by nature. She must also learn what his personality is like in order to know how to better behave in order to make him happy:

<em>1. As it is your great wish and interest to enjoy much of your husband’s company and conversation, it  will be important to acquaint yourself with his temper, his inclination, and his manner, that you may  render your house, your person and your disposition quite agreeable to him. [...]</em>

<em>2. [...] Again, nature has made man the stronger, the consent of mankind has given him superiority over his  wife, his inclination is, to claim his natural and acquired rights…</em>

<em>3. In obedience then to this precept of the gospel [“Wives submit yourselves unto your own husbands,  as unto the Lord”], to the laws of custom and of nature, you ought to cultivate a cheerful and happy  submission.</em>

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2 years ago
Find 2 or more examples of cause and effect; evaluate their logic and write your findings in a two-hundred word essay.
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In order to write this kind of essay, it is important to find clear examples of cause and effect. 
For instance,  I helped my friend with a huge problem so now she is happy. I studied a lot during the weekend and I got a 10 in the exam.
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PLEASE HELP!! Order the events of act III. 1. One Lovborg tells Thea he destroyed the manuscript. 2. Two Hedda gives Lovborg a g
scoundrel [369]
The correct order are as follows: 
3. Tessman shows Hedda the manuscript.
5. Brack relates the story of the night before.
1. Lovborg tells Thea he destroyed the manuscript.
2. Hedda gives Lovbory a gun.
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The events above are drawn from Hedda Gabler Act 3. 
The act relays how Lovborg lost his manuscripts at a party, Tessman saw the manuscript and gave it to his wife, Hedda to keep. Lovborg came to Hedda house and lied to Thea that he destroyed the manuscript and this severed the relationship between them. After Thea left, Hedda gave a gun to Lovborg and proceeded to burn the manuscripts after Lovborg left.
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Summarize paragraphs 21 and 22, maintaining meaning and logical order. How do Odysseus and his men escape? What makes paragraph
gladu [14]

Answer:

Penelope gets Odysseus’s bow out of the storeroom and announces that she will marry the suitor who can string it and then shoot an arrow through a line of twelve axes. Telemachus sets up the axes and then tries his own hand at the bow, but fails in his attempt to string it. The suitors warm and grease the bow to make it supple, but one by one they all try and fail.

Meanwhile, Odysseus follows Eumaeus and Philoetius outside. He assures himself of their loyalty and then reveals his identity to them by means of the scar on his foot. He promises to treat them as Telemachus’s brothers if they fight by his side against the suitors.Page 2

Summary: Book 21

Penelope gets Odysseus’s bow out of the storeroom and announces that she will marry the suitor who can string it and then shoot an arrow through a line of twelve axes. Telemachus sets up the axes and then tries his own hand at the bow, but fails in his attempt to string it. The suitors warm and grease the bow to make it supple, but one by one they all try and fail.

Meanwhile, Odysseus follows Eumaeus and Philoetius outside. He assures himself of their loyalty and then reveals his identity to them by means of the scar on his foot. He promises to treat them as Telemachus’s brothers if they fight by his side against the suitors.

XVideo SparkNotes: Charles Dickens's A Tale of Two Cities summary

Video SparkNotes: Charles Dickens's A Tale of Two Cities summary

When Odysseus returns, Eurymachus has the bow. He feels disgraced that he cannot string it, because he knows that this failure proves his inferiority to Odysseus. Antinous suggests that they adjourn until the next day, when they can sacrifice to Apollo, the archer god, before trying again. Odysseus, still disguised, then asks for the bow. All of the suitors complain, fearing that he will succeed. Antinous ridicules Odysseus, saying that the wine has gone to his head and that he will bring disaster upon himself, just like the legendary drunken centaur Eurytion. Telemachus takes control and orders Eumaeus to give Odysseus the bow. Needless to say, Odysseus easily strings it and sends the first arrow he grabs whistling through all twelve axes.

Summary: Book 22

Before the suitors realize what is happening, Odysseus shoots a second arrow through the throat of Antinous. The suitors are confused and believe this shooting to be an accident. Odysseus finally reveals himself, and the suitors become terrified. They have no way out, since Philoetius has locked the front door and Eumaeus has locked the doors to the women’s quarters. Eurymachus tries to calm Odysseus down, insisting that Antinous was the only bad apple among them, but Odysseus announces that he will spare none of them. Eurymachus then charges Odysseus, but he is cut down by another arrow. Amphinomus is the next to fall, at the spear of Telemachus.

Telemachus gets more shields and swords from the storeroom to arm Eumaeus and Philoetius, but he forgets to lock it on his way out. Melanthius soon reaches the storeroom and gets out fresh arms for the suitors. He isn’t so lucky on his second trip to the storeroom, however, as Eumaeus and Philoetius find him there, tie him up, and lock him in.

A full battle now rages in the palace hall. Athena appears disguised as Mentor and encourages Odysseus but doesn’t participate immediately, preferring instead to test Odysseus’s strength. Volleys of spears are exchanged, and Odysseus and his men kill several suitors while receiving only superficial wounds themselves. Finally, Athena joins the battle, which then ends swiftly. Odysseus spares only the minstrel Phemius and the herald Medon, unwilling participants in the suitors’ profligacy. The priest Leodes begs unsuccessfully for mercy.

Explanation:

ME ACTUALLY TRYING!!!!

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2 years ago
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