Answer:
Explanation:
We establish that Harriet wants to get hitched (but we knew that anyway, didn’t we?), and then Austen allows Emma to spend a good deal of time unraveling her own theories of marriage and the single life. In other words, we interrupt Harriet’s character history to bring you…Emma. Which brings us to Harriet’s own intelligence.
please tell me if I''m wrong
Answer:
What the speaker means in the second stanza is:
B) These are the metaphorical methods with which he feeds his hatred.
Explanation:
This question refers to the poem "A Poison Tree", by William Blake. The poem revolves around the speaker's wrath against his enemy.
In the second stanza, the speaker metaphorically describes how he feeds his hatred:
<em>And I waterd it in fears,
</em>
<em>Night & morning with my tears:
</em>
<em>And I sunned it with smiles,
</em>
<em>And with soft deceitful wiles.</em>
<u>Here, the speaker compares his wrath to a plant, which he waters with his tears. Plants also need sunshine to grow, which is given by the speaker in the form of smiles and deceitful wiles. The speaker is revealing the duplicity of his behavior and personality. He smiles at his foe, deceiving him into believing that everything is OK between them. All the while, however, he keeps on feeding his hatred. Eventually, it will grow into a poison tree and will kill the speaker's enemy.</u>
Try and read it again and again till you understand
The answer for the question you are asking “how much of ur research-basee literaly analysis should rely on outside sources” is c
It’s a phrase because it doesn’t have a subject