Answer:
Aunt Harriet did not kill herself or the baby, though it does seem like it at first. If you read the pages carefully, Joseph Strorm kills her actually. In the pages after Harriet leaves, David's mom says she will pray for gods forgiveness for Harriet, but J.strorm talks about the heresies of women, how they can get away with it but he says how aunt Harriet won't get away with it this time. The page after, David says how they found aunt Harriet's body in a river, his dad mentioned her in his prayers but never again. This implies murder.
Answer:
sorry needs more description
Answer:
True.
Explanation:
Turning point is the moment in a plot where there is a "turning point" in the story, something big that can modify the course that the narrative was taking and presents an advantage or a disadvantage for the protogonists or antagonists of the story, however it always presents itself as a major climax-related event.
In Macbeth the climax happens at the moment when Macbeth is close to killing Banquo. At that moment Fleance flees trying to secure his position at court. This escape is the turning point in history because it gives the necessary resources for the prophecy that Banquo received, at the beginning of the story, to be fulfilled.
Banquo's prophecy stated that he would be the point of origin of a line of kings, but that he would not be able to be king.
Marguerite is working as maid at Mrs. Cullinan's house. She does't even try to remember Marguerite's name and insists in call her Mary. Also, Mrs. Cullinan behaves rudely with Marguerite, this strongly upsets Marguerite who is unable to quit the job because her mother doesn't let her, so she decides to drop Mrs. Cullinan's favorite dishes to get fired. After that Mrs. Cullinan starts to call her Margaret, which Marguerite accepts because is closer to her real name and she was happy that the woman admitted that her name wasn't Mary.
"The absolute fairness and morality of a character's heart is what defines them."