Answer:
- The general will compel Rainsford to join the hunt
- Rainsford will try to flee from the island
Explanation:
For those familiar with this novel, it's clear that Rainsford has a dispute with Zaroff after he ends up in the water. This man possesses his own island where he engages in a unique style of hunting games. The primary aim is to train those whose ships have wrecked, granting them meals and weapons for a few days. Following this, Zaroff begins to track them down, and they must survive to win this unusual game and stay alive, with the grim outcome being death if he catches them.
This context allows us to deduce that the reasonable predictions a reader can draw from the passage are:
- The general will compel Rainsford to join the hunt
- Rainsford will try to flee from the island
The verses that illustrate
this bewildering skill in the speaker's beloved to manipulate his reasoning
abilities are “Whence hast thou this becoming of things ill,/That in the very
refuse of thy deeds/There is such strength and warrantise of skill,/That, in my
mind, thy worst all best exceeds?”
<span>In Shakespeare’s 150th
sonnet, this strange capability is characterized as the talent to transform negative attributes into positive ones in her and to execute the most trivial actions with such finesse that the
speaker is convinced that her lowest is superior to anyone else’s highest.</span>
Answer:
yes
Explanation:
many older texts are not relevant or useful in contemporary English.