Answer:
She was, indeed, the finest pick of the crowd nyehehe >:D
if I remember correctly second degree murder
Answer:
“The Yellow Wallpaper” is driven by the narrator’s sense that the wallpaper is a text she must interpret, that it symbolizes something that affects her directly. Accordingly, the wallpaper develops its symbolism throughout the story. At first it seems merely unpleasant: it is ripped, soiled, and an “unclean yellow.” The worst part is the ostensibly formless pattern, which fascinates the narrator as she attempts to figure out how it is organized. After staring at the paper for hours, she sees a ghostly sub-pattern behind the main pattern, visible only in certain light. Eventually, the sub-pattern comes into focus as a desperate woman, constantly crawling and stooping, looking for an escape from behind the main pattern, which has come to resemble the bars of a cage. The narrator sees this cage as festooned with the heads of many women, all of whom were strangled as they tried to escape. Clearly, the wallpaper represents the structure of family, medicine, and tradition in which the narrator finds herself trapped. Wallpaper is domestic and humble, and Gilman skillfully uses this nightmarish, hideous paper as a symbol of the domestic life that traps so many women.
Explanation:
Answer:
In the Declaration, Thomas appeals to the higher power, that is the Creator, to support his argument for separating from Britain.
Explanation:
In the Declaration of Independence, Thomas Jefferson pointed out three arguments to persuade the colonies to separate themselves from Great Britain.
First one was the equality bestowed to humans by their Creator, that is God; Second, certain rights that were endowed by the Creator to humanking which includes liberty, life, and Pursuit of happiness; and third, people have right to defend themselves in case these rights are violated.
The instance in whic Thomas Jefferson appealed to the higher power in the Declaration wsa when he said <em>"We hold these Truths to be self-evident, that all Men are created equal, that they are endowed by their </em><em>Creator</em><em> with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness—..." </em>In this he is appealing to the Higher Power, the Creator, that is God.