A. Because you are evaluating the novel.
The right answer for the question that is being asked and shown above is that:
(1) "<span>C. Many individuals of modern society exhibit patience in acting at the right moment."
</span>(2) C. Prufrock’s comparing his life to trivial matters
(3) <span>C. His small social circle of middle-class acquaintances.</span>
C.Hubbell uses exclamation points to show the speaker's enthusiasm, while Dickinson uses dashes to create long pauses in the poem.
Its full of mixed emotions and is hard for her to process what happened
In the story "Cora Unashamed," Langston Hughes touches on the subject of the Black experience. He discusses how conditions are for African Americans at the turn of the century. Moreover, Hughes shows that, although slavery has been abolished, equality is far from being realized.
Hughes writes "to, for, and about" black Americans in various ways. First, he talks about an experience that would have been familiar to many African Americans at that time: that of working for a white family. Moreover, many people would have been able to identify with the treatment that Cora got (<em>“She worked for the Studevants, who treated her like a dog”</em>) and with the love that she develops for the white child she takes care of (<em>“But the child was hers- a living bridge between two worlds</em>”). It is also a story written "for" African Americans, as Hughes shows them a role model worth admiring. Cora is passionate, brave and strong, as Hughes would wish all African Americans to be (<em>“Cora was humble and shameless... and she didn’t care what the white people said”</em>).