<span>Another magic cane brought them to a higher plane, with more light and vegetation, and here was the creation of the animal kingdom. I would say this sentence indicates that it is an emergence creation story since in this sentence man is lifted up and brought into the animal kingdom.</span>
Answer:
B) You should always tell people how you feel.
Explanation:
Even though it may seem something difficult to do, especially to timid or introvert people, telling your feelings will always be better than keep them. By telling, you let others to understand you and keep missinterpretations out of the question. Also, it will help to <u>liberate the stressful weight</u> of having them inside.
A theme that Geoffrey Chaucer develops through these two excerpts is that of treachery, since both King Peter of Spain and King Peter of Cyprus were betrayed and their lives ended tragically. King Peter of Spain was betrayed by a man named Bertrand, who had agreed to protect him in exchange for a great compensation, but who eventually handed him over to his half-brother, Henry, who promised him an even greater reward and who assassinated Peter in his tent in 1369, becoming the new king. This is narrated in the excerpt, where Bertrand is compared not with Oliver of Charlemagne, friend of Charlemagne, but with the knight that betrayed him ("No, Oliver of Charlemagne... such a trap!").
Peter I of Cyprus devoting his short yet intense life to fight Islam, and he led the short yet devastating Alexandrian Crusade, but his life ended abruptly. Betrayed by his wife and by some of his closer knights, he was assassinated in his bed also in 1369. This is also referred in the poem ("That conquered Alexandria... on thy bed!").
To sum up, both excerpts revolve around this theme, which they present very similarly: after emphasizing the deeds of the two historical characters, they finalize by regretting their tragic endings.
The answer that best explains how Nye's word choice helps establish her voice in the excerpt is the following one:
<span>Nye uses figurative language to support her opinion that staying connected to one's heritage makes life richer.
</span>As you can see, she is using her mother tongue when talking to her neighbors so as to show them that she is still very close to her heritage and family background.