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Lesechka [4]
10 months ago
14

Purple hibiscus

English
1 answer:
Gwar [14]10 months ago
7 0

She gradually begins to talk and open up more after visiting Nsukka, and she develops feelings for the young priest, Father Amadi. In the end, she stays Catholic, albeit with a more liberal outlook influenced by Father Amadi and her aunt Ifeoma.

<h3>What Kambili tells Jaja that God works in mysterious ways?</h3>

Kambili continues, thinking that her father would have liked her to claim that God “works in mysterious ways.”

In Nsukka, Jaja discovered his independence, but he also started to regret not challenging Papa earlier.

Therefore, The wife of Eugene, Beatrice, was found to have been poisoning her husband's tea and slowly dying him for years, according to Chapter 16 of Adichie's Purple Hibiscus.

Learn more about Kambili here:

brainly.com/question/28842854

#SPJ1

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Based on the content what can you assume the speaker in Harlem night song enjoys
Olenka [21]

The author of "Harlem Night Sing", Langston Hughes, enjoys music. The Jazz and blues music played by the bands influences his poem. In this poem there is a couple. They are walking together, enjoying the music and the beautiful night in Harlem. It is as if they were making music together.

4 0
2 years ago
What does victor frankenstein tell the captain?
Lesechka [4]
<span>I, the miserable and the abandoned, am an abortion, to be spurned at, and kicked, and trampled on.(See Important Quotations Explained)</span>

Walton then regains control of the narrative, continuing the story in the form of further letters to his sister. He tells her that he believes in the truth of Victor’s story. He laments that he did not know Victor, who remains on the brink of death, in better days.

One morning, Walton’s crewmen enter his cabin and beg him to promise that they will return to England if they break out of the ice in which they have been trapped ever since the night they first saw the monster’s sledge. Victor speaks up, however, and convinces the men that the glory and honor of their quest should be enough motivation for them to continue toward their goal. They are momentarily moved, but two days later they again entreat Walton, who consents to the plan of return.

Just before the ship is set to head back to England, Victor dies. Several days later, Walton hears a strange sound coming from the room in which Victor’s body lies. Investigating the noise, Walton is startled to find the monster, as hideous as Victor had described, weeping over his dead creator’s body. The monster begins to tell him of all his sufferings. He says that he deeply regrets having become an instrument of evil and that, with his creator dead, he is ready to die. He leaves the ship and departs into the darkness.

3 0
3 years ago
Which of the following sentences uses sequential organization?
larisa [96]

D. First, students must fill out their health forms completely. Then, they must head to the gym for orientation.

8 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
PLZ HELPPPPPP
Lostsunrise [7]

Answer:

Among all female poets of the English-speaking world in the 19th century, none was held in higher critical esteem or was more admired for the independence and courage of her views than Elizabeth Barrett Browning. During the years of her marriage to Robert Browning, her literary reputation far surpassed that of her poet-husband; when visitors came to their home in Florence, she was invariably the greater attraction. She had a wide following among cultured readers in England and in the United States. An example of the reach of her fame may be seen in the influence she had upon the reclusive poet who lived in the rural college town of Amherst, Massachusetts. A framed portrait of Barrett Browning hung in the bedroom of Emily Dickinson, whose life had been transfigured by the poetry of “that Foreign Lady.” From the time when she had first become acquainted with Barrett Browning’s writings, Dickinson had ecstatically admired her as a poet and as a woman who had achieved such a rich fulfillment in her life. So highly regarded had she become by 1850, the year of Wordsworth’s death, that she was prominently mentioned as a possible successor to the poet laureateship. Her humane and liberal point of view manifests itself in her poems aimed at redressing many forms of social injustice, such as the slave trade in America, the labor of children in the mines and the mills of England, the oppression of the Italian people by the Austrians, and the restrictions forced upon women in 19th-century society.

Elizabeth Barrett was extremely fortunate in the circumstances of her family background and the environment in which she spent her youth. Her father, whose wealth was derived from extensive sugar plantations in Jamaica, was the proprietor of “Hope End,” an estate of almost 500 acres in Herefordshire, between the market town of Ledbury and the Malvern Hills. In this peaceful setting, with its farmers’ cottages, gardens, woodlands, ponds, carriage roads, and mansion “adapted for the accommodation of a nobleman or family of the first distinction,” Elizabeth—known by the nickname “Ba"—at first lived the kind of life that might be expected for the daughter of a wealthy country squire. She rode her pony in the lanes around the Barrett estate, went with her brothers and sisters for walks and picnics in the countryside, visited other county families to drink tea, accepted visits in return, and participated with her brothers and sisters in homemade theatrical productions. But, unlike her two sisters and eight brothers, she immersed herself in the world of books as often as she could get away from the social rituals of her family. “Books and dreams were what I lived in and domestic life only seemed to buzz gently around, like bees about the grass,” she said many years later. Having begun to compose verses at the age of four, two years later she received from her father for “some lines on virtue penned with great care” a ten-shilling note enclosed in a letter addressed to “the Poet-Laureate of Hope End."

Before Barrett was 10 years old, she had read the histories of England, Greece, and Rome; several of Shakespeare’s plays, including Othello and The Tempest; portions of Pope’s Homeric translations; and passages from Paradise Lost. At 11, she says in an autobiographical sketch written when she was 14, she “felt the most ardent desire to understand the learned languages.” Except for some instruction in Greek and Latin from a tutor who lived with the Barrett family for two or three years to help her brother Edward prepare for entrance to Charterhouse, Barrett was, as Robert Browning later asserted, “self-taught in almost every respect.” Within the next few years she went through the works of the principal Greek and Latin authors, the Greek Christian fathers, several plays by Racine and Molière, and a portion of Dante’s Inferno—all in the original languages. Also around this time she learned enough Hebrew to read the Old Testament from beginning to end. Her enthusiasm for the works of Tom Paine, Voltaire, Rousseau, and Mary Wollstonecraft presaged the concern for human rights that she was later to express in her poems and letters. At the age of 11 or 12 she composed a verse “epic” in four books of rhyming couplets, The Battle of Marathon, which was privately printed at Mr. Barrett’s expense in 1820. She later spoke of this product of her childhood as “Pope’s Homer done over again, or rather undone.” Most of the 50 copies that were printed probably went to the Barretts’ home and remained there. It is now the rarest of her works, with only a handful of copies known to exist.

Explanation:

i believe in you, you got this!

9 0
3 years ago
What form of punctuation is missing in this quote?
Julli [10]

Answer:

Lothar told Keith, "After the game, I'm going to try and see if Tomas, the owner of the red car will give me a ride because I don't want to walk home. "​

Explanation:

I think it would be that you need a comma between "Tomas" and "The"

Hope this is right and hope i helped! ^^

6 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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