The
best part from Kate Chopin’s “The Story of an Hour” which best
highlights the transformation that Louise undergoes is the following:
<span>Mrs.
Mallard thinks to herself about how she’ll mourn when she sees her
husband’s dead body and how much he loved her. But she is a little
excited about the chance to make her own decisions and not feel
accountable to anyone.</span>
<span>In
this story she later dies after his presumed dead husband returns
home to give her a big shock. The medical people that examine her
come to the conclusion that she died of a heart attack caused by
happiness.</span>
<span>I
hope it helps, Regards.</span>
1) The description of the broken windows and dusty curtains in the first paragraph foreshadows the Time Traveler's later discovery that <u>the race he encounters in the novel known as the Elois is not an intelligent race and that they are quite inactive and slow in comparison to Morlocks who are the complete opposite of them.</u>
2) The Time Traveler thinks that the diet of fruit is <u>that the Elois race simply accepts the state of the situation in which they live. As mentioned previously, they are quite lethargic and with 0 will to fight back or change their fate.</u>
<u>Explanation:</u>
The text that has been provided above is from the Science fiction novel that has been written by H.G. Wells, named The Time machine. In the excerpt that has been given here shows that Elois is the race showing the future of human society.
Eloi is a person who does not have to do anything in his or her entire life because they have some one else to do work for them and they are their working class.