Answer:
i hope these are hepful
Explanation:
It is a series of 1,000 poems, each of which tells a story. If you put together the first line of each of the poems, you get a final story, which is #1001, hence the title. Each of the poems was written by a different Persian poet in the 15th through 18th centuries and later translated into English. Most of them deal with legends from the Mongol Empire that were told by troubadours along the trade routes of Bucharest and Kamchatka
It is a group of stories which are interrupted by "Scherazade saw morning and discreetly fell silent" The following night the story telling begins right after the interruption. The interruptions are based on the length of the story and during some nights 2 or 3 short stories are told. Some of these stories are organized into groups such as "Garden of verses". Many of the stories take place during the time of Haroun, Caliph of Bagdad. It is on 1001th night that all the stories have been told. .
Answer:
The Enlightenment man would be the most beneficial to today's society.
Explanation:
As was shown in the question above, the Enlightenment man was a great scholar and used to apply the concepts he had studied in the society in which he lived, always considering logic and truth and aiming to help the people most oppressed by society.
As our current society is taken over by polariazação, the persecution of science and study, the persecution of minorities and political fanaticism, I believe that the great scholar and thinker as an enlightenment would be the ideal to be a contemporary hero.
Answer:
She sacrifices herself for her beliefs.
Explanation:
Antigone did not accept that her brother did not have a proper burial where she could say goodbye to him and send her soul beyond the way it should be done. For this reason she decided to bury her brother, even in the face of the king's prohibition and the threat of death for anyone who disrespected the rules he imposed.
However, Antigone believed that the family was above any political leadership, even the king himself and decided to sacrifice herself to exercise her belief and bury her brother in the appropriate way.
"By the Waters of Babylon" is a short story by Stephen Vincent Benét. The main character, John, is a priest and a priest's son who has lived in a post-apocalyptic world. He decides to travel to a forbidden place, a place where it is believed by himself and his people that gods used to live. After crossing the river Hudson and reaching New York, John finds out that the beings they believed to be gods were, in truth, men like himself and his peers. He realizes there are no demons haunting the place and also becomes aware of the fact that his people should be able to build great buildings and work with metal just like men used to do in the past.
In the excerpt, John has just returned home and told his father what he has seen. His father cautions him not to tell others the same way he told him. Since people have been living with wrong convictions for so long, they will probably not be able to take it all in at once, and might even doubt John, call him a liar or a crazy man. But if the truth is revealed little by little, people may get used to the idea that men caused their own destruction and that they are able to rebuild the world. Therefore, the best option seems to be: facing the truth is not an easy task.