I found this on line hope it helps
<span>The narrator arrives on the premises expecting that Roderick will be ill given the letter that he previously received from him. He says that the letter itself speaks to the nervous agitation that Roderick must be experiencing and expects that Roderick will not be in his right mind. When the narrator finally makes contact with Roderick he is absolutely shocked by the changes that Roderick's appearance has undergone. Roderick greets the narrator with such "vivacious" warmth that the narrator is taken aback, questioning the sincerity of the greeting. However, upon looking more carefully at Roderick the narrator is reassured of the genuineness of his expression and settles down to take in Roderick's full appearance. Upon examining Roderick's face, the narrator is shocked at the dramatic shift in the narrator's boyhood good looks, comparing Roderick to a wasting away corpse but still maintaining some of the natural appealing qualities which he once bore. It is clear that Roderick was once a vivacious and attractive individual but now suffers from great anxiety and misery given his condition. In fact, the narrator is so surprised by Roderick's current condition that he doubts the fact that it is the same person that he once knew. Moreover, Roderick's actions add to the perplexing nature of Roderick's appearance. The narrator describes Roderick's inconsistent behavior as being full of life at one moment and absolutely sullen the next. This strange behavior reinforces previous characterizations of Roderick as anxiety-ridden and ill, which is a dramatic shift from his previous character. </span>
Writing that immediately involves the reader's interest and carries them through the final paragraph with no loss go concentration
Explanation:
The political scene has changed to a considerable amount over the most recent few decades. The web has played a vital role in this change. Social sites, specifically, are presently a genuine factor in political crusades and in the manner individuals consider issues.
They are opposing ideas, so yes. A dream is NOT reality and vice versa. Yes the phrase is an oxymoron.
:)
Answer:
Henry uses a passionate tone. Here are some excerpts that highlight this tone:
"The war is inevitable—and let it come!"
"Our chains are forged!"
"I repeat it, sir, we must fight!"
"The battle, sir, is not to the strong alone, it is to the vigilant, the active, the brave."
"There is no retreat but in submission and slavery!"
". . . give me liberty or give me death!"
Explanation:
I know this is correct because i got it wrong then it showed the right answer which was this and this is the exact same wording to might want to change it up so you dont get in trouble.
Hope this helps :)