The correct answer of the given question above about Woodcuts is option B. RELIGIOUS SCENES OR IMPORTANT HISTORICAL EVENTS. The scenes that were commonly depicted in Woodcuts are religious scenes or important historical events. Hope this is the answer that you are looking for.
<span>This play reveals a problem of comparing life and death. The part “the body lieth in clay” messages the reader about how the soul can ‘weep’ after the death because while a person were alive it succumbed to sweetness of several sins. In the last lines, The Messenger tells us that when you are dead, all things that make us happy and shape our personality just goes away and mean nothing. </span>
Answer:
A) In the context of the story "The Landlady", people face death many times, without knowing they are initially.
Billy did think there was something odd about the way he was received and ushered in. Only that he kept excusing them away.
B) Billy, I think, should have realised her plans. There was nothing ordinary about an Inn that had had only two guests in two years and whose guests were still in the Inn.
Another pointer to just what she was capable of, was the fact that she was skilled in the ability to enbalm dead bodies.
C) Billy was probably under a spell and not in denial. From the moment he walked into the Inn. There were lots of clues to show that the Inn was unusual. First was the fact that with such a ridiculous price, he was the only guest that night and many nights before.
A guest in their right minds would have taken an objection to staying.
Cheers
Answer:
They tell us, sir, that we are weak:unable to cope with so formidable an adversary.But when shall we be stronger?
Explanation:
They used metaphor.
I think it's D because you don't have to read every word in the text. you just have to understand what you know