Well, you're going to talk about the conflicts in The Lottery and The Lady or the Tiger... So... in The Lottery, the main conflict was that the lady (whatever her name was) was chosen to be stoned in the lottery. It wasn't really resolved in anyway, except that she got.. stoned. I haven't read The Lady or the Tiger, but you would do the same thing for that. Then you would state the theme, or moral, or main point, of each story. And then you would compare how the resolutions for both conflicts demonstrate the stories' themes.. Does it make a bit more sense?
The answer is the second one
<span>Mentor : old friend of Odysseus
Eurynomous : a suitor of Penelope (a netherland or underword spirit);</span><span>he third son of Aigyptios and kin to Antiphos</span><span>
Halitherses : a seer who calls the eagle sighting an omen of Odysseus's return
Eurycleia : the only servant that knows of Telemachus's voyage; </span><span> servant in the household of Odysseus and took care of him and his son</span><span>
Aegyptius : father of Eurynomous</span>
Monsters and heroes is a fiction which is about the history and journey of a hero and is very famous and well known.
<u>Explanation:</u>
Monster and heroes is a fiction which consists of parts in it and all the parts are very famous and well known. All the parts mostly talk about the journey of a hero of the fiction. This is the central idea of the story.
Joseph Campbell's work with Mono myth is absolutely the most notable. In his book, "The Hero with a Thousand Faces", he maps out the essential account example of pretty much every story out there and really comes it down into seventeen phases in three stages. Others have made comparable examples or further consolidated Campbell's into twelve or so steps, however Campbell's work is commonly viewed as the most huge.
<span>C. The effect he wanted the poem to have on readers
Hope this helps you.
Happy Holidays.</span>