<span> Curie, a two-time Nobel Prize recipient and physics professor at the Sorbonne (a college of the University of Paris), presented this speech at Vassar College in Housekeeping, New York, on May 14, 1921. The speech, preserved in print as no. 2 of Vassar's Ellen S. Richards Monographs series, centers on what Curie called "the somewhat peculiar conditions of the discovery of radium" and her view that "the scientific history of radium is beautiful." The speech is provided online at the Gifts of Speech Web site, by Liz Linton, site director; and electronic resources and serials librarian in Cochran Library, Sweet Briar College, Virginia.</span>
Answer:
2. It makes you feel confused, clocks don't strike thirteen. Seems they may be creating a different world. Saying its bright and cold makes me think they're might be snow
4. It makes you feel kind of bad for the narrator. The person speaking seems bitter and like he has had a bad life. Seems like the start of a revenge story
5. Makes me feel sad. The old man seems as though he is lonely, and even the fish don't want to be with him. Seems like the author created a lonely world
Explanation:
Answer:
Atticus tells the children that Aunt Alexandra has decided (and convinced Atticus) it would be best for the family if she stays with them for "a while," which worries Scout even though she knows there's nothing to be done. No, Scout doesn't believe that Atticus feels this but she does later understand Atticus's need to have his sister involved in their lives.
Explanation:
The answer is personification.
The idea of death is being personified by doing actions only a human can do, like bragging and owning the shade. With the line “so beautiful death cannot claim her”, the writer really means that death shall not brag about him wandering in his shade really.