Answer:
i would thimk that it would be answer B.
Explanation:
Explanation:
For Georgiana: It was about the flaws each and every individual has. No one is perfect, even though some may say the "yes, I'm perfect and so are you!" so and so. No! For Georgiana, it was a symbol of being human, for being who she was, and not for anyone else. The birthmark meant that she was special and unique in her own way.
For Aylmer: It simply meant about perfection and greed. He was blinded by perfection and the comments of others that made him so obsessed with the word 'perfect' and 'beautiful', that he went to extreme lengths to make that happen, not knowing it would affect him and Georgiana greatly later on. He was blinded by greed. He had Georgiana, no one else did. So, why not make it more? Why not create and transform her into someone who she wasn't. Without the birthmark, Georgiana was simply not Georgiana. She was another person, someone whole new different that Alymer created.
hope this helped!
Frederick Douglass wrote autobiography “Narrative of the Life of Fredrick Douglass, an American slave”. The critics doubted that he was a slave because he was able to read and write and he was also smart and intelligent
Explanation:
Fredrick was a slave who escaped and became a well renowned author activist and a speaker. He had written a dozen of books delivered a lot of noteworthy speeches though he had received a very little formal education. He was also the lawyer for the women’s right and he fought for the right of women to vote.
He was a prominent leader of the abolitionist party and he dedicated most of his life for the upliftment of people from slavery. He was talented and intelligent so the critics refuse to accept that he was from the slave society
And honoured everywhere for worthiness; At Alexandria, he, when it was won - <em>Knight</em>. Knight is a siginificant character in the book. He has many qualities, but four of the them is emphasized in the book. He is worthy for this name because of the good qualities.
Of courtliness, and stately manners took; And would be held worthy of reverence - <em>Prioress</em>. Prioress tries hard to seem courtly.
In wisps hung down such locks as he'd on head; But as to hood, for sport of it, he'd none - <em>Pardoner</em>. Pardoner sells official church pardons and the lines is a reference to this act.
A lover and a lusty bachelor, With lock well curled, as if they'd laid in press - <em>Squire</em>. Squire is a young, handsome man as described in the lines who accompanies the Knight in his adventures.