The answer: Ernest Hemingway and also Zora Neale Hurston
Answer:
- "A shadow had lain down beside him. And this shadow threw itself over him."
- "Meir, my little Meir! Don't you recognize me . . . You're killing your father . . . I have bread . . . for you too . . . for you too . . ."
Explanation:
The correct options most directly reflect the idea of cruelty arising under horrible conditions, because they reveal, first, a cruel attack on the man hiding a piece of bread, and second, that the attacker was, in fact, that man´s son, who was killing his own father out of pure hunger and desperation.
The incorrect options only provide the perspective of the narrator, who is a mere spectator of the man hiding a piece of bread, and describe the events before the final reveal, which is the cruelest act of all: the killing of a father by his own son due to hunger.
Answer:
Option b
Explanation:
It ought to be Rising action
Answer:
The speaker uses metaphors like "keep it like a warm coat" to explain his love for her and how to treat the poem.
The speaker also adds further down the poem that he has "nothing else to give" as to show that he truly loves the reciever of the poem.
And he keeps repeating "I love you" as to remind the reciever that this poem is here to lift their spirits up and remind them that the speaker loves the reciever.
And at the bottom when he says "Keep it, treasure this as you would if you were lost, needing direction," he is reffering, agian, to show he loves her and to keep the recievers spirits up in down times.
He reffers to the "pot full of yellow corn to warm your belly in the winter" as the warm feelings that he hopes to give to the reciever of the message.