<span>when your higher in rank, or higher status, or quality.</span>
Answer:
The third stanza jumps way forward in time. Aengus is now an old man, and he's spent his whole life looking for the "glimmering girl" who appeared to him that day when he was out fishing. Even though he's old, he's determined to find out where the girl has gone. He imagines that, when he finally finds her, he'll kiss her and hold her hands. He also says that he and she will walk among the grass, and together they'll pluck the "silver apples of the moon" and the "golden apples of the sun" until the end of time
Explanation:
She uses her money to buy her grandson a gift
<span>She screams.
"When Lennie explains that he likes to pet soft things, Curley's wife reveals that she too likes to feel silk and velvet, and she invites him to feel her hair, which is very soft. He does, but his big, clumsy fingers start to mess it up, and she angrily tells him to let go. As she tries to get her hair away from Lennie, he becomes scared and holds on more tightly. When she begins to scream, Lennie covers her mouth with his hand. A struggle ensues — Lennie panicking and Curley's wife's eyes "wild with terror" — until her body flops "like a fish" and then she is still."</span>