Answer:
✅ Dorothy’s diary—at least in the entries preserved here—chronicles daily life at Grasmere, mostly focusing on walks she took alone and with her brothers or Samuel Taylor Coleridge, a frequent visitor. She mentions visits they make and visitors they receive and some of the poems they read and write. And she notes some of the cooking that she does. It’s a simple account of ordinary life, with little additional introspection. It’s the kind of thing that might interest a Wordsworth biographer or someone studying daily life in the 1800s. But as a general reader, with limited interest in Wordsworth, I didn’t find much here, especially given that the small volume contains hardly no notes or explanatory text putting these months in the context of the Wordsworths’ life. In fact, I didn’t realize until well into the book that the John she mentions so frequently is another brother.
IamsugarBee
Your answer would be.
D - state and superior courts
A) It belonged to a War General at the time
<u>The correct answer is d. religion. </u> Karl Marx said that religion is the opium of the people, that religion is a tool used by the ruling classes, also said that man makes religion and religion does not make man. His views are atheists, he flatly denies the existence of God.