The narrator’s mental health hinges not only on whether<span> she has work to do, but </span>what kind<span> of work it is. She wants to write and isn’t allowed, something that “</span>does<span> exhaust her a good deal” (3). The subtle undermining of her confidence as a writer doesn’t exactly help to repair the damaged relationships she shares with her husband and her sister-in-law, sending her further into a frenzy of paranoia that leads to her mounting obsession with the design of the paper on her bedroom wall.</span>
1.) the money will soon finish
What is it you're asking? I am knowledgeable about the holocaust however I can't answer a question that hasn't been asked.<span />
In William Shakespeare's "Sonnet 18," the line best paraphrases to but your youth will never fade.
In "Sonnet 18" Shakespeare tries to compare a fair maiden to a summer's day, but he expresses that there is nothing that compares to her because her perpetual beauty and youth are far greater than such a temporary, inconsistent season.
So, when Shakespeare writes <span>"<span>But thy eternal summer shall not fade,</span>" he is saying that her timeless youth will never fade, unlike the briefness of a summer's day.</span>
The correct answer should be an Atlas.
Atlases are huge books filled with maps, most commonly political and geopolitical maps.