I believe the answer is unemotional
This is how the authors use historical details to support the claim that US political leaders’ positions on slavery impacted the relations between the US and Haiti:
- by describing John Adams' actions to support Haiti in its fight against the French. President Adams was opposed to slavery in principle (he thought it was the against the values of republicanism) and in practice (he did not own any). This probably explains his decision to "sen[d] guns and supplies" to Haiti in the self-liberated slaves' rebellion against French colonists.
- by quoting Thomas Jefferson’s views on the dangers of enslaved Haitians rebelling. Indeed, the text tells us that "Jefferson ... was terrified by the success of the Haitian revolution." This position by the new president impacted the US' relation with Haiti because Haiti was viewed "only as a threat" and not as a sister republic.
- by illustrating Thomas Jefferson’s view that the Haitian rebellion could lead to a rebellion of the enslaved in America. This is the continuation of the previous answer. The authors write that Jefferson "expected ex-slaves from the island to spread into America, preaching ... rebellion to the slaves." Another sentence repeats this claim: "if Haitians could claim their freedom ... , why couldn't slaves within the United States do the same thing?"
Answer: Hamlet is angry at his mother for getting married to his uncle so quickly after his father's death.
Explanation:
<em>Hamlet</em> is Shakespeare's great tragedy about a man who seeks revenge after his father is murdered by his uncle, Claudius. To add to Hamlet's misery and despair, his uncle got married to his mother, less than a month after his brother's death.
In these particular lines from <em>Act I, Scene II</em>, Hamlet protests over their marriage and criticizes his mother. He is angry at the female gender, claiming that women are weak:
<em>''Frailty, thy name is woman!''</em>
Hamlet explains that even animals would have mourned longer than his mother. According to him, the tears on her cheeks had not even dried, and yet she jumped into <em>''incestuous sheets".</em><em> </em>Hamlet expresses his concern for the future and is aware that no good can come out of this marriage. However, he decides he will not confess his feelings to other people at this point. Note that later, when Hamlet meets the ghost of his father, he will devise a plan to act as a mad man and revenge him.
Answer:
None of the choices are correct.
Explanation:
Rip Van Winkle falls asleep because he drinks a mysterious and powerful liquor that is offered to him by an equally strange group of men.