Answer:
1. Born with a clubfoot.
2. He came into his inheritance at the age of ten.
4. Many of his contemporaries, with the notable exception of Shelley, disliked the man and his work.
Lord Byron was a British poet, peer, politician and one of the most important figures in the Romantic movement. Byron was a good friend of Percy Bysshe Shelley, fellow poet, and his wife, Mary Shelley, author of <em>Frankenstein</em>.
Byron was also born with a clubfoot, and inherited great fortune and land early on. The incorrect statement, however, is the third one. Byron's title was inherited from his great uncle, the "wicked" Lord Byron, when he passed away in 1798. This made him the 6th Baron Byron of Rochdale and owner of Newstead Abbey in Nottinghamshire.
Answer:
<u><em>Judson Webb died by drinking a bottle of whiskey that contained two tablets of rat poison.</em></u><em>
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Explanation:
Ruthless is an exceptional story written by William de Mille. Judson Webb is one of the main characters of this story. The author elaborates on how Judson kills himself after he leaves his camp in the mountains.
The main theme of this story is that <em>any act of revenge has its devastating drawbacks</em>. One can not shake this feeling off and sooner or later gets punished for their wrong doings.
<em>Judson is shown to be very evil and his wife fears him.</em>
Each discusses a political event to appeal to the reader’s logic.
Answer:
Dr. Johnson's, an African American physician whose avocation was assisting young black tennis players he took him under his wings.
Answer:
The 1920s is known as the Jazz Age.
Explanation:
The correct answer for this question would be option B. Another name for the Jazz Age is the Age of the Era of Wonderful Nonsense. "The Twenties were a turbulent time, one too often stereotyped as the age of wonderful nonsense, Flappers and bathtub gin.