Elizabeth Gaskell's Ruth is a social novel, also know as "problem novel" that deals with the old Victorian views about legitimacy and sinful behaviors. Gaskell portrays an outcast, "a fallen woman" in a very compassionate way.
It is demonstrated how the society would act towards a mother who conceived a child out of a marriage and how the main character, Ruth, is viewed as an evil and sinful person, despite the fact that she is actually good from what we can see. A proof of that would be the fact that she was willing to act as a nurse for typhus victims. She even treated Bellingham who was responsible for her ruin.
It is also interesting to note that she was not treated as a bad person or unwanted person by the townspeople who actually appreciated her nursing care. She also did not speak down to them. She recognized their needs and they were thankful for that.
The six things that Juliet would do than marry Paris is to commit suicide, she rather take her own life if she wouldn't be married to Romeo and be married to Paris instead. She also thinks that she should be at risk or face different challenges than to be married off to him. She also thinks that she rather be a criminal. She thinks that it is best to be tied down and be exposed to wild animals, than to be married to Paris which she hates, she would also likely want to be living with the dead people or to live in a mortuary, just to be away or not to be married with him.
<span>The physical components of a computer system are called <u>Hardware.</u><u /> Software is the intangible parts.</span>