One of the women who aided the cause of the American army was Prudence Wright also known as the Minutewoman. When the women of Pepperell in Massachusetts knew about the Boston Tea Party, they burned tea leaves in their town. So, when the men went to the war, the women decided to form their own army to protect the people left in their town. It was Prudence who was elected to become the leader of the "Mrs. David Wright's Guard." They wore the clothes of their husbands and brought weapons like muskets and farm tools. The reason for their small army being formed was that Prudence heard from her brother that there was a smuggling happened from Canada to Boston. So, on the day of the smuggling, the small army blocked them and confiscated their documents and held them overnight as prisoners while messages were sent to the Committee of Safety.
The correct option is B. Can <u>ever</u> diss<u>ever</u> my <u>soul</u> from the <u>soul.</u>
This pattern can be recognized when listening to a recitation of the poem. Here, Edgar Allan Poe is using a iambic pattern. This metter is one of the most common pattern in poetry and in which an unstressed syllable is followed by an stressed. In previous verses of the poem, he combines iambic pattern with an anapest (two unstressed syllables followed by a stressed syllable.
But in this line, he uses a iambic. So the correct answer is the second one.
The East–West Schism (also the Great Schism or Schism of 1054) is the break of communion since the 11th century between the Catholic Church and Eastern Orthodox Churches.[1] The schism was the culmination of theological and political differences which had developed during the preceding centuries between Eastern and Western Christianity.
East–West Schism
Date
January–July 1054
Also known as
Great Schism,
Schism of 1054
Type
Christian Schism
Cause
Ecclesiastical differences
Theological and Liturgical disputes
Participants
Pope Leo IX
Ecumenical Patriarch Michael I Cerularius
Outcome
Permanent split of the two churches into the modern-day Catholic Church and Eastern Orthodox Churches
A succession of ecclesiastical differences and theological disputes between the Greek East and Latin West pre-dated the formal split that occurred in 1054.[1][2][3] Prominent among these were the issues of the procession of the Holy Spirit, whether leavened or unleavened bread should be used in the Eucharist,[a] the Bishop of Rome's claim to universal jurisdiction, and the place of the See of Constantinople in relation to the pentarchy.[7]
The Battle of Saratoga. It was the first major win of American during the Revolutionary War, it took place on October 7, 1777.