It is terrorist attack
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This is for “the tell-tales heart”
Answer: I have briefly read the book but here is my answer:
Explanation:I think that it is because the old mans heart beats were the reason of the narrators breakdown. They were pressuring the narrator to tell the truth. It was almost as if the old man was still alive persuading the narrator to tell the truth, but the old man didn’t need to do that. He only needed the narrators anxiety issues to do that. Between the eye, the anxiety, the heart beat, even the police, the narrator felt trapped in his own web that has been weaved every time be even looked at the old man. This story is about anxiety, remorse, sadness, guilt. The old man didn’t need to tell on the narrator. The narrator did that himself. In conclusion, it’s called “the tell-tales heart” because it was the heart that told on the narrator to the police, at least not directly. When we think of tell-tale, we think of someone who tells on people and exposes them, that is exactly what the heart did, but he did it in a way that would guilt and posses the narrator to do it himself. The purpose of the story is that no matter how much you try to run away, it will always catch up to you, whether it’s guilt, your past, your enemies. At one point you have to face it, before it’s too late.
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The pilgrims landed on the coast of the USA at what is now known as Cape Cod. They started exploring the area and came across a deserted Native American Villiage. The pilgrims then found a stockpile of corn buried in wicker baskets under the sand. It was apparently the Indian villagers' seed stock for the summer. They moved inland during the winter and came back to the coast during the summer. The pilgrims dug up all the corn and took it back to the ship with them
Hello. This question is incomplete. The full question is:
"He's here in double trust: First, I am his kinsman and his subject, Strong both against the deed; then, as his host, Who should against his murderer shut the door, Not bear the knife myself."
Who speaks this line and what does it mean?
Answer:
Macbeth speaks this line, he is thinking of reasons why he should not kill Duncan.
Explanation:
This is the moment when Macbeth lives an internal conflict because he is afraid to kill Duncan, but has a strong greed and desire to be king. He speaks this line to himself, showing how the whole situation upsets him mainly because he tries to find reasons not to kill Duncan, amid Lady Macbeth's own greed and influence.