In 1920, women's suffrage was finally achieved.
I'd say there are two answers here - she must obey her husband's wishes and follow his advice (he tells her not to teach Douglass how to read) and slavery strips her of her innate beliefs and benevolent nature (she used to be a kind and caring person before she got slaves).
In relation to the opening line of the novel ("It was a pleasure to burn"), the next three paragraphs serve to clarify to the reader what was being burnt by the character "While the books went up in sparkling whirls..." and describe in depth his pleasure while burning books, as the author mentions: "<em>the blood pounded in his head and his hands were the hands of some amazing conductor..."</em> or when saying: "...He would feel the fiery smile still gripped by his ace muscles in the dark".
Answer:
- "I love to hear her speak
''
- "And yet by heaven, I think my love as rare''
Explanation:
Going by the utterances of the speaker in this sonnet, one can tell that the speaker's mistress is not overly attractive but he still loves to hear her speak and has a rare love for her.
This shows the seriousness of the sonnet because it shows that the speaker was able to look past physical features to like his mistress with a rare love that is not based on physical features and comparisons.
A preposition is a word that is used to relate a word to another word, phrase or clause. Usually, prepositions precede a noun of pronoun. In the sentence, "There are women in the class who work and attend college", the preposition used here is the word "in". The preposition "in" precedes the noun "class".