Answer:
“point out the way” to “higher eminences of thought.”
inject “genius, mental vigour, and moral courage” into a conforming public.
Explanation:
These are the two reasons why John Stuart Mill believes that exceptional individuals can be valuable to a culture. Mill was a defendant of freedom of speech, as he believed this was the only way in which new ideas can arise and spread in a society. Moreover, Mill believed that individuals who were exceptional would spread these new ideas and therefore, inject society with mental strength, genius and moral courage, all of which would lead the society to a higher level of thought.
A.
The incorporation of many allusions to other texts breaks with poetic conventions inasmuch as poetry is traditionally based in telling the story of a character or a group of characters in a straightfowards fashion that does not refer to things outside the story except in a referential sense. This would be the case in most epic poetry, like the ´Iliad´ or ´Paradise Lost´.
B.
The poem distorts the traditional meaning of poetry in the sense that traditional poetry is based in the epic form, where clearly delineated characters are set out in some traditional heroic or tragic scenario. Prufrock´s existence is opposed to any real heroic or classic tragic plot.
Hello. This question is about The Most Dangerous Game "by Richard Connell
Answer and Explanation:
The characterization that General Zaroff promotes of his servant Ivan can apply to himself, in parts and even General Zaroff himself agrees with this.
He claims that Ivan is a good servant and is very strong, but in addition to being deaf and dumb, he is wild and rude, this is the result of his race, since Ivan is a Cossack. After releasing this information, the general smiles and states that he is also a Cossack. With this, the general uses the characterization of Ivan for him, in parts. He shows that despite being a cultured and well-educated man, he belongs to the same race as Ivan, which makes him a wild man, inside. This is proven throughout history.