This is what Hawthorne thinks about the governors' ability to govern, and whether he seems to find fault with them or not:
<span>Hawthorne seems to indicate that while those men might not have been gifted leaders, they were good men, motivated by "proper" intentions. However, he doesn't seem to be in fault with saying that they are corrupt, selfish, or lazy.</span>
At this point in the book is the closest I think readers see Atticus to actually being angry at his children. I feel like Atticus thinks it's better to sit down and talk through the problem than spank the kids and create unnecessary resentment. Definitely a lawyer's approach to parenting (my dad's a lawyer and acts like this all the time.)<span />

A <em>prepositional phrase</em> is a group of words containing a preposition, a noun or pronoun object of the preposition, and any modifiers of the object.

- after
- at
- before
- behind
- by
- during
- for
- from
- in
- of
- over
- past
- to
- under
- up
- with

I think the line 'Since he was old enough to know, big boy' is the best line in the excerpt that uses metonymy. This is because the phrase 'he was old enough' is just an expanded meaning of the phrase 'big boy' - which is what metonymy is all about.
I can give you some ideas of what you can right about but its all on you or you could just ask your teacher
there are
Hobbies you can talk about
food
sports
family
somehting like that