Answer:
Mood: The mood of this story is depressing. Aunt Georgiana is not engaging with Clark like she used too, and she is not being a happy person. When she finally realizes how unhappy she with her life she explains “I don't want to go, Clark, I don't want to go,” (Cather 696).
Explanation:
HOPE IT'S HELP U MAKE ME A BRAINLIST PLEASE!!!!!!!
Answer: Love for each other.
The fact that both people gave up something or special value to the other for love profoundly states that they are willing to make great sacrifices for each other. Their poverty, wisdom, and possessions do not hold great value. It was poverty that made them sacrifice. Wisdom did not play a role. And possessions are of no regard to the characters.
Answer:
- A. She includes the explicit lesson learned from Arachne’s tale.
- D. She displays Arachne’s arrogant and impertinent behavior.
Explanation:
When Coolidge told the story of Arachne, she made sure to include the arrogant and impertinent behavior that got Arachne to challenge the gods by saying she was better than Athena.
In the end Athena turned her into a spider and Coolidge makes sure to include the lesson learned from Athena's tale of arrogance being a punishable offence.
Answer:
1: During his first few days in the forest, Brian repeatedly notices fish jump in the lake. 10-12
2: Brian finally finds the survival kit even though he has learned on his own how to survive. Ch.19
3: Brian unwittingly turns on the Emergency Transmitter which brings the plane to rescue him. also ch.19
4: He finds a rifle which makes him unsettled, because its power and mastery seem to separate him from the wilderness that has become his home and he doesn’t like the feeling. ch.19
Explanation:
These are some examples of dramatic irony in the hatchet.