Answer:
The next day is rainy so Aubrey and Bridget play inside all day. Aubrey is still really sad about what happened to her mom, but is also kind of mad that her mom left her. Aubrey tells Bridget about the car crash that killed her dad and little sister, Savannah.
Answer:
Childlike trust.
Explanation:
The poem "Chimney Sweeper" written by William Blake is one of the poems in his "Songs of Experience", a collection of poems. This poem details the lives and experiences of children born in poverty, working as chimney sweepers and finding contention in themselves.
Personally, the poet protests the societal issues like child labor and poverty prevalent in the society, but the narrator of the poem seems to find happiness in himself. The child narrator writes that even through all the pain and suffering that Tom endured working as a chimney sweeper, he "was happy and warm". This is the childlike innocence, trust that everything will be alright if they do their duty.
Thus, this claim by the child narrator is an ironic expression of his childlike trust, the blind faith/ belief that everything will get better and well for them.
Answer:
According to Shakespeare as the author of this play, He portrays Caesar as an ambitious and loyal man. He is a prisoner of his principles and always fixed to the laws of public institutions. He was charged by his conspirators as someone whose judgment is delusional because he looks for absolute power over Rome which was not true. His faith in his principles and obedience to the law did not allow him to quit going to the Senate. He does not pay heed to his wife's dream because he was a man of his words.
Explanation:
Caesar's aura and public image was immortal to him and he always has a deep faith on his capabilities. The ideas of Caesar which were conflicting to Rome powerful elite made sense by the end of the play in Act V when Brutus finally accepted that Caeser's power is beyond his grave and producing misfortune for them.
We drove along the river and into the village