Answer:
The correct response is Option A: Dr Reefy has inner qualities that make him admirable.
Explanation:
This quote is from the short story called <em>Paper Pills</em> by author Sherwood Anderson. It is part of the short story cycle called Winesburg, Ohio published in 1919. Doctor Reefy is an aging man who keeps track of his thoughts on scraps of paper that he stuffs into his pockets and later they turn to hard little balls. He seems detached from society except for one friend and his wife, who died a few months after they married. It would seem the thoughts he writes on the papers are interesting or important since he read them to his wife. He and his wife did seem to share a connection by the description.
Its is free verse because no rhyme scheme
you need to change what is the "subject" here, so it'd be like this.
The songs shall be sung by her.
hope i helped, good luck!
Answer: i learned how to write when i was in kindergarten. it wasn't difficult to me. well what really inspired me to write i always see my mom writing in print cause she has this pretty hand writing and so i wanted to write just like her so i started to write in print and she taught me how to write in cursive. well some challenges that i still face now is writing in cursive but i'm getting better at it.
Explanation:
have a great day everybody
There have been about a dozen more or less famous movie adaptations of Shakespeare's tragedy. Most of them were more or less faithful to the original plot and setting. One of the foremost was Orson Welles' 1948 adaptation, with himself in the title role. Welles wanted to show the broader context of political struggle with the introduction of religious struggle - so he introduced a new character, The Holy Man, who was to represent the new religious force of Christianity juxtaposed to the old paganism that the Weird Sisters embodied. However, Akira Kurosawa's "Throne of Blood" (1957) was arguably the most successful adaptation from a cinematic point of view. Kurosawa changed the setting to medieval Japan, with Japanese aristocracy representing the Macbeth couple. Thus Kurosawa universalized the theme of political corruption and personal greed, showing them in an entirely different milieu.