The play we are about to read will fill in the details of this story.
The line is basically saying: What is missed here, our play should fix. Of the response choices, Option A, What is lacking in this description is lacking in our play, is not a correct statement, so this answer is simply wrong. The rest are all correct statements, but only one is the best restatement. B is a correct statement but it adds the idea that there are "juicy details". The line does not hint at whether or not the information is juicy. Option D is also correct, however, the line doesn't say that the prologue is an introduction and it can't include the whole story. Option C is the best choice because it accurately restates the line without adding extra information.
Answer: to inform the reader of King Ptolemy's greatness
Explanation: translating the demotic text on the Rosetta Stone took the work of many scholars.
<span>In the poem "Counting Small-boned Bodies" written by Robert Bly, Bly creates a sort of sympathy for his readers. A bit of innocence is shed on the readers as they learn what happens to the war victims. Their bodies sit there serving as nothing but a trophy for the world to commemorate the war. Bly states all the things that they could serve purposes for but none that which will happen.</span>
Answer:
He was one of Odysseus' men; he died at Circe's when he fell off a roof and broke his neck while drunk.
Explanation: