Answer:
D. People depend on each other.
Explanation:
Samuel Beckett's one act play "Endgame" tells of an absurd story of a blind protagonist and his power over the other characters who are also helpless in their own ways. This power dynamics among the characters, with the character of Hamm as the most supreme of the four, is evident in his constant need of help from Clov.
Throughout the play, we can see that Hamm depends on his servant Clov for whatever he needed to do. Meanwhile, Clov also have a sense of obligation to his master Hamm who had taken him in when he was alone. This subservient notion is numerously questioned by him but that did not overrun his feeling of obligation to Hamm. Also, the characters of Nagg and Nell shows the dependence of each other for their survival. The couple who re parents to Hamm also had to depend on their son, and Nagg constantly has to "kiss" Nell which seems to him the only thing that keeps him going. All these characters' relationships with one another shows the universal theme of a person depending on each other for their survival.
There were hundreds of people who chose to watch the fire instead of help when it first started. Because on the web you can often see commentaries like this.
To answer this question we need to understand that Odysseus has a desire that he shares with all Homeric heroes, it is the desire to gain glory through his exploits and deeds. At various points in the text, we see the way in which Odysseus rather arrogantly ignores the advice of different characters or does what he thinks is best without thinking of the consequences of his actions and what might happen to both himself, and his men, as a result. The best example is when, at the start of his wanderings, Odysseus was so focused on gaining glory that he deliberately revealed who he was to the Cyclops, Polyphemus. As a result this brought down calamity on both himself and his men because the cyclops, Polyphemus was the son of Poseidon, God of the sea and earthquakes.
However, by the end of the story, when he reaches Ithaca, he deliberately bides his time and disguises himself as a beggar instead of rushing home and declaring who he is to the group of extremely hostile suitors, shows how he has developed and changed. He is not the same glory-hungry individual who often committed rash and rather vacuous actions in order to gain kudos. Instead, he tempers this aspect of his character with the need for patience, and remains incognito until he has established his position and what men are loyal to him and he is ready to strike. The text therefore indicates that Odysseus as a character learns from his mistakes and develops during the course of his journey.
This question is incomplete. The complete question would be the following:
Tiles
Morality play
Mistery play
Interludes
Tropes
Pairs
Dramatized events in the Bible
Introduce farcical comedy
Characters personify abstract concepts
Performed within the church
A moral play is a type of drama where the characters personify the abstract, concepts and qualities. Present a lesson on good behavior. Moral works were difficult to teach people a lesson on how to live their lives according to church rules.
A mistery work is a medieval work that is based on stories from the bible. Dramatize events in the Bible or the lives of different saints. Each work had four or five different scenes or acts. The priest and monks were the actors. Each scene or act was performed in different place in the city and people moved from one stage to another to see the work. The play usually ended outside the church for people to go outside the church and listen to a sermon after seeing the play.
Troops are made inside the church
Interludes presents farce comedy. The term farce is derived from the french word for ''stuffing'', in reference to improvisations applied by actors to medieval religious dramas. Later forms of this drama were performed as comical interludes during the 15th and 16th centuries.