Dudley Randall's poem “Ballad of Birmingham” is a tribute to a real-life church bombing in 1963, which killed four young girls. The main theme is that nothing - not even a mother's love or the sacred walls of a church - can protect an innocent child from racial violence.
A bit tragic :I
What are the two answers tell us and we can answer
Where is this from? then i might be able t help easier
Let's solve this through process of elimination. We know the first part isn't a question, because there are no words to indicate that. Answer choice D is out. Answer choice B doesn't make much sense either, because it doesn't show any end quotation mark to finish off a statement. Answer choice C, a comma, can not fit into this either, because there would have to be an "and" or something similar after the word "town". The only choice left is answer choice A. "The manager will be out of town; he won't be back until Monday."
<em>How does this excerpt support the idea that the story is told by an unreliable narrator?</em>
- <em>It supports the idea that the story is told by an unreliable narrator because it has intratextual signs saying that the narrator is contradicting himself by showing that he or she does not remember the facts well. In the sentence, “Agnes said she had seen no one, and I saw that she thought I was dreaming” it is clearly stated the unreliability of the narrator, Agnes finds very unlikely that there was a woman the afternoon before, and thinks the narrator is not making proper sense of what he or she is saying. Another fact that shows the unreliability of the narrator is that it was dark when they went down the passage and they did not bring a light, so it is very unlikely that the narrator had seen anything.</em>