This is the theme of an individual versus the society. Creon represents the society as the king who leads. Antigone opposes what Creon has ordered and opposes the laws of the society, wanting to obey the laws of gods.
The Importance of Being Earnest, by Oscar Wilde, is a play that has been described as a trivial comedy for serious people in which its characters create alternate and fictional personas to be able to deal with the burdens put on them by Victorian society. First acted in 1895 in the St. James Theater in London, this play deals with such serious matters as marriage and the customs and beliefs of Victorian society in a trivial way and satirize Victorian conventions.
In this particular excerpt of the III Act of the play what Jack, one of the main characters of the play, is showing is a tendency to show his emotions as he consistently and insistently tries in some form express his emotions and feelings through a constant attempt at hugging and touching Miss Prism.
Answer:
The excerpt from the poem <em>The Great Wave: Hokusai</em> that best supports the conclusion that the artist intended the wave to feel threatening is the one that begins with: <em>"All anger bends under his unity".</em>
Explanation:
Unfortunately,<u> the passages are not well delimited</u>, but that is the line that answers the questions. So, the passage that contains it, is the right one. <u>By reading this line, we can easily understand how brave and strong the artist wanted the wave to look like.</u> What he wanted the wave to transmit. Its unity, its immensity makes "all anger" bend under his unity. There is nothing that this wave can not control, his power, his length, his toughness is what gives the power. <u>This is why I chose that paragraph, it is very clear the description of the wave and the intention of the author in that line.</u>
The right answer is "B Red Cloud describes the situation as bleak; with little food and fading traditions, they felt one of their only choices was to agree to reservation life and adopt white American ways."
In 1871, the government established the Red Cloud Agency on the Platte River, downstream from Fort Laramie. As outlined in the 1868 Treaty, the agency staff were responsible for issuing weekly rations to the Oglala, as well as providing the annually distributed supply of cash and annuity goods. The agent and Washington officials would determine how much of the annuity was to be paid in cash or goods, and sometimes the supplies were late, in poor condition, inadequate in amount, or never arrived at all. Red Cloud took his band to the agency (a predecessor of the Native American reservation) and tried to help them in the transition to a different way of life. In the fall of 1873, the agency was removed to the upper White River in northwestern Nebraska.