Answer:
yk wat sis ... my handwriting will be very bad than a kids handwriting -_-
this is my handwriting lol
John Proctor is the protagonist of <em>The Crucible</em>, by Arthur Miller. In this story, Proctor has one major trait that brings about his demise: his lust for Abigail, a girl who works for him. Abigail and John embark on an affair, which ends up ruining his reputation. Although Proctor tries to hide the affair at first, he eventually realizes that he is facing his own demise as his wife Elizabeth is arrested.
Proctor's actions are consistent with those of a tragic hero. A single character trait led Proctor to make a series of bad choices, and in a context where reputation is everything, his damaged image cannot be expected to make a comeback. These actions are his downfall.
"Then the rebels will overcome the empire's troops and take the city."
This is the answer because it is still hypothetical. The other options imply that it has already happened or is happening, however it is just the fear of the leaders.
(Also, for curiosity's sake- what is the context? It sounds like Star Wars.)
Answer:
Owlcation»Humanities»Literature
Ralph Waldo Emerson's "Days"
Updated on November 5, 2019
Maya Shedd Temple profile image
Linda Sue Grimes more
Poetry became my passion, after I fell in love with Walter de la Mare's "Silver" in Mrs. Edna Pickett's sophomore English class, circa 1962.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Source
Introduction and Text of "Days"
Ralph Waldo Emerson's "Days" offers eleven lines, an American Innovative Near-Sonnet, a term I coined. Near-Sonnets offer even more intensity than the traditional sonnet, while delivering the beauty of the traditional form.
This poem has gathered quite a few pages of ink from scholars and critics arguing about the meaning of the term "hypocritic" from the first line, "Daughters of Time, the hypocritic Days." Some have argued that the term should be thought of as "deceivers" while other insist that hypocritic merely means "actors." The controlling literary device is personification and thus both "actors" and "deceivers" offer a meaningful choice to those who wish to opine.
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