The answer is C) it seems to me that Salinger’s protagonists all think “to be or not to be,” like hamlet!
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Answer:
She thinks it's demeaning and discriminatory.
Explanation:
The Help is a debut novel of Kathryn Stockett that narrates the story of Miss Eugenia also known as Skeeter Phelan. She is a white young woman of 22-years old. The book narrates the story of the black maid's lives in Jackson Mississippi. Skeeter aspires to be a writer but gets employed in Jackson Journal where she was required to write about housekeeping. Skeeter rarely knows about housekeeping so she takes help from her friend's maid, Aibileen.
The Home Help Sanitation Initiative was a bill that was passed as a disease-preventive bill. According to this bill, African American maids were required to use separate bathrooms so that they may not spread their diseases to the whites. When Skeeter cam to know about this she thought this initiative to be demeaning and discriminatory.
This question seems to be incomplete. However, there is enough information to find the right answer.
Answer: Pearl notices that the scarlet letter on her mother's bosom has paved the way for lack of sunshine in her mother´s lie.
Explanation:
The question refers to The Scarlet Letter: A Romance (1850), by Nathaniel Hawthorne.
In the provided excerpt, Pearl notices that the sun seems to dislike her mother because of the scarlet letter on her bosom. Pearls comment about how that doesn´t happen to her because she doesn't have the scarlet letter yet implies that she thinks she will when she grows up to be an adult woman.
This means that she doesn´t think that the scarlet letter is unique to her mother, but something she will also get when she grows up. And she doesn´t admire her mother for it, as she dislikes how the sun runs away from her.
Pearl´s words imply that she, who is usually aware of things that others can´t see, has realized that the lack of sunshine in her mother’s life is caused by the scarlet letter on her bosom.
A is the answer and what I’m typing right now is so i can send this answer but it’s A
The clear and obvious English of the title "A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning" means D. a farewell urging the listener not to be sad.
The speaker points out that he is compelled to consume his time apart from his beloved, but before he go, he explains that goodbye should not be the event of sorrow and mourning.