Answer:
The second option: By implying a similarity between the ruins of Ozymandias civilization and the Rapa Nui's ruins.
Explanation:
While walking among the head statues the author noticed how some of them were fallen and broken, some appearing complete and yet so far away from any habitation that he compared them to having the empty gaze of Ozymandias.
He also touched on how empty the island is and lamented on the disappearance of its ancient culture, but yet the statues still stood bearing the same expression they were carved in, and quoting Shelley in his comparison: "the heads still look terrifying, their expression sneering, 'Look on you mighty and despair'"
The answer is exerpt 3, after saying that they drove a giant pike into his eye, he is wailing that "Nohbdy, Nohbdy's tricked me, Nohbdy's ruined me" so the other giants that came to see what happened thought he was saying nobody and assumed it was the work of the gods and went away
<span>metaphors to compare equality to things the audience knows.
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Answer:
Explanation:
In 'Journey to the End of the Earth' Tishani Doshi describes the journey to the coldest, driest and windiest continent in the world: Antarctica. The world's geological history is trapped in Antarctica. Geoff Green's 'Students on Ice' programme aims at taking high school students to the ends of the world.