Read this excerpt from "Birdfoot's Grampa.” But, leathery hands full of wet brown life, knee deep in the summer roadside grass,
he just smiled and said they have places to go to too. Why does the author most likely use the figurative language "they have places to go to too”? to show that Grampa respects the toads as living creatures
to prove the toads do not really have anywhere to go after all
to demonstrate that the toads have a busy night ahead of them
to compare the toads to the conditions they face that night
The answer is the first option, it is a way to show that grandpa that toads are his equal, they are living, breathing creatures. He's been helping the toads all night, bringing them out of the rain and into the car. When he finally releases them, it's a way to humanize them.
""To bend with apples the moss'd cottage-trees, / And fill all fruit with ripeness to the core" best captures the bountiful nature of the season since it's the most vivid.
Answer: What belief does Cugoano explicitly state in the passage?
Explanation: Christians should use the Bible to argue against slavery. The practice of enslaving people is contrary to Christian principles. There are many Christians who oppose slavery.