The children react on seeing the sun with excitement and they showed it by bullying a girl who has seen it more.
Explanation:
- When the sun comes out after 7 years, the children are anxious and excited about seeing the sun.
- But at the same time, they make a note of Margot and target her. She is from the Earth and has seen the sun more than they have. The other children, being jealous of her lock her up in a closet when the sun comes out.
- Margot is also very anxious during the time that the sun comes out.
"She walks in beauty, like the night
Of cloudless climes and starry skies;
And all that’s best of dark and bright
Meet in her aspect and her eyes;
Thus mellowed to that tender light
Which heaven to gaudy day denies."
This stanza is about a rare and exceptional kind of beauty. Byron is trying to communicate a certain perfection of beauty, and he turns to a peculiar feature of the night sky to explain what he means. On a clear night (that's what he means by "cloudless climes"), the stars can be so bright as to light up the darkness, but in a "mellow," subtle way—not the kind of overly bright, "gaudy" sunlight of the daytime. For Byron, the starlight is perfect—it brings together "all that's best of dark and bright." In that balance, Byron sees perfect beauty, and he says that the subject of his poem (the "she" he keeps talking about) is as beautiful as that particular kind of rare, perfect, "tender light."
Well they won’t have all the other set rules they need like at the begining when they had the other rules so the animals wouldn’t have anything to follow to keep them in line
Indirect speech is speech which tells you what someone said, but does not use the person's actual words: for example, 'They said you didn't like it', 'I asked her what her plans were', and ' Citizens complained about the smoke'. [mainly British]regional note: in AM, usually use indirect discourse.
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