Answer:
Hewo Asuna here
At the end of the story, it says that "when the doctors came, they said she died of heart disease-- of a joy that kills." They assume that her weak heart could not handle the happiness she felt when her husband walked through the door alive. They do not know- or refuse to acknowledge- the actual cause for her death.
Explanation:
Hope this helps
Explanation:
For Georgiana: It was about the flaws each and every individual has. No one is perfect, even though some may say the "yes, I'm perfect and so are you!" so and so. No! For Georgiana, it was a symbol of being human, for being who she was, and not for anyone else. The birthmark meant that she was special and unique in her own way.
For Aylmer: It simply meant about perfection and greed. He was blinded by perfection and the comments of others that made him so obsessed with the word 'perfect' and 'beautiful', that he went to extreme lengths to make that happen, not knowing it would affect him and Georgiana greatly later on. He was blinded by greed. He had Georgiana, no one else did. So, why not make it more? Why not create and transform her into someone who she wasn't. Without the birthmark, Georgiana was simply not Georgiana. She was another person, someone whole new different that Alymer created.
hope this helped!
There is raining butterflies everywhere!
Answer:
You're getting more imaginative.
In the arts (and in business), there's a classic theory that the best things happen at the convergence of disciplines. You develop immunity to the "paradox of expertise" when you have a large knowledge base, where your advanced knowledge of one area clouds your ability to see new ideas.
Explanation:
Answer:
The ( I ) connects the two poems
Explanation:
Because i is repeated