He describes what happens and then comments on how he feels about it.
<u>Answer:</u>
The Germans now had to rely on radio transmissions from their powerful wireless station at Nauen, a few miles from Berlin is the textual evidence best supports the inference that the Germans could not lay new cables in the waters of the English Channel
<u>Explanation:</u>
The story of Dark Game" written by Paul B. Janeczko narrates the story of spies that dwindles from the American Revolution to the Cold War. This displays how George Washington used spies to put an end to British.
The excerpt tells that the cable are cut,this implies that the wired and long distance communication is not possible any more.Also message sent through cables can be ciphered. During assembling Code Breakers, the British government summoned Alan Turing who built “Christopher” a deciphering machine.
I’m sure the answer is longing
I believe the correct answer is: He adopts the life of a pirate, becoming rich by stealing from others.
In this excerpt from “The Story of Frithiof the Bold” written by William Morris, the life in exile make Frithiof, a great hero, adopt to the life of a pirate, becoming rich by stealing from others, after the incident in the temple of Balder:
“So Frithiof became an exile, and the wanderer on the face of earth. For many years he lived the life of a pirate or Viking, exacting tribute from other ships or sacking them if they would not pay the tribute.”
Answer:
C. Revising a poem’s ideas and words
Explanation:
This question refers to Mackenzie Connellee's poem "Invitation".
There, the author counters the claim that writing poetry is easy work and gives some examples of the creative process.
In the mentioned lines, the author makes a metaphor about poetry "slopping lazily over the couch of a page" while the author has to "remove its muddy shoes and rearrange the pillows". That means that it takes some hard work and long road from the idea and raw material to the finished poem.