Read the excerpt from "The Lady Maid's Bell." But that wasn’t the only queer thing in the house. The very next day I found out t
hat Mrs. Brympton had no nurse; and then I asked Agnes about the woman I had seen in the passage the afternoon before. Agnes said she had seen no one, and I saw that she thought I was dreaming. To be sure, it was dusk when we went down the passage, and she had excused herself for not bringing a light; but I had seen the woman plain enough to know her again if we should meet. I decided that she must have been a friend of the cook’s, or of one of the other women servants: perhaps she had come down from town for a night’s visit, and the servants wanted it kept secret. Some ladies are very stiff about having their servants’ friends in the house overnight. At any rate, I made up my mind to ask no more questions. How does this excerpt support the idea that the story is told by an unreliable narrator?
The narrator seems to be very....tense. She is seeing things in the dark clear as day. She is talking sorta fast, like she is nervous or something. I hope this helps a little.
Starr and her mom interprets the questions the investigator asks about Khalil being a drug dealer as them trying to put the death of Khalil on himself and trying to make them feel better about killing her friend.
Al Gore’s acceptance speech of the Nobel Prize use a serious tone, a formal style, thee language used in his speech was formal and academic even when he uses also pauses during the speech as nonverbal communication to allow the audience to laugh.