Chaucer's descriptions from "The Monk's Tale" which best illustrates Fortune as deceitful is,
"Who then may trust the dice, at Fortune's throw?'
The Monk tale is a series of tragedies which represents the news that the wealth and position is just an illusion. He refers through the example of many falling from high to low ends, such as the example of Lucifer falling from heaven. Through such example and stories, he continues to show the people who have fallen from grace.
Model of tragedies which Monk offers is a Boethian one that is which is a reminder of the versatility of the life itself, to bring on top to those who are crashing down on the grounds and that the tendency of the feminine, whimsical fortune to spin her wheels. Hence, it is a simple narrative and Boethian reminder that high status often ends inadequately.
The right answer here is <u>D. the rocks that make the wall.</u>
In "And some are loaves and some so nearly balls", "some" refers to the boulders or the rocks that make the wall between them.
He wants to point out that this wall is made of things the shape of which is not really logical (walls are usually made of bricks which perfectly fit one onto the other), such as loaves and balls the same way people build walls in real life based on reasons that are not really logical either, but the wall is somehow kept balanced and standing.
The excerpt from "digging" shifts from one moment in time to another, while the haiku describes a single moment in time.
It basically empasizes the "eleven stars" and the "hot sky". It depicts the tree in the painting as if made of hair.
Hope this helps
Schatz is german for Treasure so i guess that he thought his son was a treasure to him.