Answer: There's a book that I like called Lights out, and it speaks about African Americans and racism in society. It speaks about the experience of having to live in the world as a dark skin color and having to be afraid every time you have to walk across the street. Every time you have to fear for your life when a cop car passes by. This is my favorite book.
Hope this helps!
Answer:
Sewall quotes Matthew 19:6 from the Bible to argue that all humans are equal in the eyes of God, hence slavery is immoral.
Explanation:
<u>Sewall was a well documented abolitionists</u> who unlike many <u>argued,</u> as evident in this passage, t<u>hat all humans are equal</u>. he does this using the biblical reference stating the same as well as the concept of Redemption.
By saying that the black people from Africa <u>are redeemable</u>, he urges the Christians to think of them in the same purview they think of their fellow man from. the possibility of <u>redeeming the slaves with christian faith</u> is presented by him as a way of elevating them from their plight. Using the Bible, he is also able to argue that the condition of the saves and the black people from Africa can be the fault of white people.
Answer:
Trochaic tetrameter
Iambic pentameter
Explanation:
The first line is from the poem <em>The Lady of Shalott </em>written by Alfred Lord Tennyson. It is an example of a trochaic tetrameter. This means that it consists of four metrical feet called trochees. One trochee consists of one stressed (long) syllable followed by one unstressed (short) syllable.
The second line is from the poem <em>Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard </em>written by Thomas Gray. It is an example of an iambic pentameter - a type of meter where each line consists of five iambs. One iamb contains one unstressed syllable followed by one stressed syllable.