I am pretty sure that description above belongs to Nancy Lammeter. I choose this option because, as far as I remember, both Silas Marner and Dunstan Cass are morally-weakers. What about Godfrey Cass - he is just opposite to Dunstan which does not concides with the description. I think it's clear, regards!
Answer:
Ponyboy tries to stay neutral in his description of the church. That fits with the overall style of the novel. It reads like an investigative report focused on the plight of the Greasers. I believe that was intentional by Hinton. Hinton doesn't stay completely neutral though. She is able to give the reader reasons to care about the Greasers and feel their pain. That style comes out through Ponyboy. As I said, Ponyboy tries to stay neutral in his description of the church. He talks about how the church is off by itself. He tells the reader that it was small, and he tells the reader that it was covered in spiderwebs. It sounds like the perfect place to hideout. However, Ponyboy can't help but narrate the feelings he gets from the church.
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Answer:
i can´t see can you zoom it a little more
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Answer:
Ironically, what the wife and everyone else failed to notice was that the "singing" was the howl of a "werewolf".
Explanation:
Ironically, what the wife and everyone else failed to notice was that the "singing" was the howl of a "werewolf".
Lodge Meeting nights, more and more often they had him to lead the singing because he had beautiful voice, and he’d lead off strong, while the others always following and joining in, high voices and low. It brings the shivers on me now to think of it, hearing it, nights when I’d stayed home from meeting when the children was babies — the singing coming up through the trees there, and the moonlight, summer nights, the full moon shining. I’ll never hear anything so beautiful. I’ll never know a joy like that again.
Answer:
Creativity I think
Explanation:
it looks like that would fit better than the other ones