Your question is incomplete because you have not provided the answer option, which are:
The narrator is preoccupied by a desire to travel.
The narrator spends many hours traveling by train.
The narrator is frustrated by the noise of travelers.
The narrator has fond memories of her travels.
Answer:
The narrator is preoccupied by a desire to travel.
Explanation:
In the poem "Travel," by Edna St. Vincent Millay, the speaker expresses an intense yearning for traveling. In fact, she is so obsessed and absorted in her dreams and eagerness about traveling, that during the day she can hear the whistle of a train. Besides, at night she cannot sleep but sees the train's "ciders red on the sky" and hears the sound of a steaming engine. Thus, she has a fascination with traveling, since she would take any train and go anywhere, and she believes she would make the best of friends.
Oisin. His name literally means young dear. In this story, told by his mother, he was turned into a dear by a druid.<span><span><span>
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Among the sentences in the excerpt from Leo Tolstoy's The Death of Ivan Ilyich, I think the statement that shows that Ivan Ilyich has realized the hypocrisy of his earlier life is: "Ivan Ilyich knows quite well and definitely that all this is nonsense and pure deception, but when the doctor, getting down on his knee, leans over him, putting his ear first higher then lower, and performs various gymnastic movements over him with a significant expression on his face, Ivan Ilyich submits to it all as he used to submit to the speeches of the lawyers, though he knew very well that they were all lying and why they were lying." This is because in his earlier life before he was terminally ill, he too also submitted to the lawyers in order to work his way up on the social ladder.
This fable shows that the things and people considered unimportant might have a big impact on our lives. It is significant never to underestimate an underdog that one day he might prove his worth. We can observe this idea in the fable when the time comes and the mouse proves himself worthy. In matter of size, the story resembles <em>David and Goliath</em> where David defeats his opponent although he was smaller than him. The correct answer is D.
Answer:
question 1 is b question 2 is b
Explanation: