This statement is correct because the novel accurately and vividly depicts the gap between Victorian moral ideals and their absolute subversion and degradation. When deformed and hideous Mr. Hyde knocks down a little girl in the passage, it is almost a metaphor for his knocking down everything that is sacred and valued within his society - and the girl herself is a symbol of innocence. A couple of months later, he beats a man to death, displaying his urge for violence. But the most disturbing fact is that he is the same person as Dr. Jekyll, a well respected and decent man of high standing in his society, who can't bear to give up on his evil alter-ego. It depicts the fact that the more the society tries to restrain our dark urges, the stronger and more irresistible they become.
Umm what??? I don’t get the question
Answer:
One day, two girls had a sleepover. They were having fun, but when it hit 1 in the morning, they heard screaming. "The screaming was coming from the attic!" the one girl called out, the other stood there in fear. The two girls, curious of the noise, headed out of the bedroom they were in and into the hallway. The two girls reached the attic, and they suddenly heard banging on the front door. The girls ran back to the bedroom and was traumatized from what had been happening. They stayed there until morning, hiding under the girls bed. Morning came and they told the girls parents. The one who was sleeping over had left, and now the parents explain to their daughter that it was a nightmare, but it wasn't. Two days later and some random guy was found sneaking into peoples homes and dragging in hostages with him, the girl was terrified, but shes safe.. For now.
Explanation:
I home this is good enough ;-; I'm not the best so-
Answer:
This allusion supports the search for freedom and the difficult world of runaway slaves.
Explanation:
Oh Susanna is a popular song part of the minstrel tradition in which African Americans were made fun of and depicted as simple and ignorant. The original song has a verse in which the protagonist talks about killing black men along the way during the Gold Rush. This verse and other racist remarks of the original text have been taken out over the years. The use of this allusion in the poem Runagate Runagate by Hayden, expresses the urge to find freedom, even if it meant struggles, hardship or even death. It is, at the end, an allusion that reminds the reader of the will and the defiance needed to run away.