Answer:
Dear Scout Finch,
I saw how you have been taking the items that I have left in the tree. I also saw how the tree was filled in. I wanted to apologize for that. Assuming you don't know who I am yet, my name is "Boo" Radley. I know that everyone is afraid of me, but I assure you, there is no reason why they should be. I may not be the smartest man in town, but I'm not mean. Let me tell you about myself. My real name is Arthur Radley. I am very nice, at least I try to be anyway. An incident happened when I was younger, and ever since then, I have been in my house. I know that children play games about me. Adults make up rumors about me, and everyone believes those rumors. Everyone is scared of me, and you all call me "Boo." I am honestly upset about this because I am all alone. I don't even get how anyone could think so low of a man. So that's it about me I guess. I wish I could go outside. But anyway, I have a request. Please tell the town about me. Let them know im not a monster. I want to enjoy the rest of my life. I want to go outside, feel the sunshine, make friends, laugh. If I tried to go and do all of those now, people would run away and hide from me. I fear I would be sent to jail or a nut house. I understand if you don't believe me, or fear to help me
I just hope that you do help me, because i want to be like everyone else.
from, Arthur "Boo" Radley
Explanation:
I read this book last year, and I had to do projects like this lol, hope this helps you :). Also im assuming that you only have to do one of these lol. I chose the letter to a character one. Wrote in the position of Boo Radley, and wrote to Scout Finch. It's approximately 304 words.
A. sound right
<span>Because so many leaves had fallen, their parents helped them; direct rake the yard.</span>
Answer: A. In Hamlet there are two women. Gertrude and Ophelia. Throughout the play they are refereed to by the name "women" and are treated as if they are weak and frail. Depicting that through Hamlet there is often little to no respect for them.
B. Hamlet does experience true melancholy. He begins to experience both melancholy and madness because he is having trouble avenging his fathers death by killing the murderer.
C. Hamlet at first did feign his madness but he soon gave into it. He gave into the madness after thinking that the ghost was a trick being played on him by the devil.
Hamlet began to have "madness" as an affect from the melancholy.
Explanation: