I think the answer you are searching for is:
"On the fast track to madness due to the loss of his lover Lenore, the speaker in Edgar Allan Poe's poem "The Raven" would like nothing more than for the raven to give him good news about her return. When he asks the bird if he and Lenore will be reunited in Heaven, it accordingly responds "Nevermore!"
Hope this helps!!
Answer: it explores the theme of the death of a woman
Explanation:
Answer:
way she could. In the end she battled her addiction and found room in her heart to let two children, Scout and Jem, into her life. Atticus asks his children to consider the ignorance of their friends and neighbors comes from years of conditioning. It is difficult to undo the s
Explanation:
The statement above is FALSE.
Homonyms refers to two or more words which have the same spelling, the same sound but different meaning. The three words given above, that is, Mary, Marry and Merry do not have the same spelling and sound, therefore, they are not homonyms.
In 'Night', the narrator is Eliezer, a Hungarian boy who was 12 years old at the moment and who was living in Sighet. This town was part of Hungary during World War II, at the time this story was set (on the contrary now it is in Romania).
Moshe the Beadle was Eliezer's teacher of Jewish doctrine and, in fact, he was an inspiring and challenging educator for this kid. All foreign Jews were sent out of town by the Hungarian police, including Moshe, as part of the anti-Semitic acts generalized all over the nazi Europe. Hungary was one of Germany's allies during World War II, and obeyed the type of politics fostered by Hitler, contributing to spread attacks against Jews and ejections within its territory.