Answer:
Nick Caraway meets the man with the enormous owl-eyed spectacles in Jay Gatsby's library, during one of Jay's parties. Nick and Jordan had politely left their company to find Jay. ... This is the reason why the man with the spectacles is so surprised that the books are actually genuine. He expected them to be fake.
Explanation:
Gatsby's saving grace is that the books and the library are not to show off to everybody - just Daisy. They, like the wealth which has bought them, are merely a means to an end: his dream of winning Daisy back. So the books symbolize Gatsby's vision of himself and his dream but also the fact that they lack true depth.
Hope this helps :)
1. there is a knothole in a tree, where boo radley leaves things like pennies and gum, thereby creating a bond with jem and scout)
2. (when scout watches the house burn down, she doesn't notice that boo steps out of his house and puts a blanket around her shoulders)
3. (dill dares jem to touch the back porch of boo's house, and boo's father tries to shoot them)
4. (in the process of running away, jem loses his pants. when he returns to retrieve them, he finds them mended and folded)
5. (one day, the children find that the knothole has been cemented, perhaps by boo's father)
6. (the snowfall correlates with the day that tom robinson is arrested - nov. 21st).
Answer:
A.
Explanation:
In the book titled "In Nature's Name: An Anthology of of Women's Writing and Illustration , 1780-1930" the author Barbara T. Gates compiles the lost works of women who wrote from being inspired by the nature.
From the late eighteenth century to early twentieth century, British women wrote about the nature.
By calling the needlework as "seemingly peculiarly adapted to powers and tastes of women" primarily meant to signal the limitations of a cliche she plans to undermine. Therefore, option A is correct.