Answer:
A) her escape from the White House during the war of 1812.
Explanation:
I summarized her letter and put the essential lines below. She is leaving the White House but not leaving the valuable portrait.
1. The good Mr. Carroll has arrived to hurry my departure, but I refuse to leave until the huge painting of General Washington is secured, and it must be unscrewed from the wall.
2. Because this procedure was deemed too time-consuming for these critical periods, I have directed that the frame be broken and the canvas be removed.
3. It has been completed! and the priceless portrait was entrusted to the care of two distinguished gentlemen from New York for safekeeping.
4. And now, my sister, I must leave this house, lest the retreating army captures me and imprison me thereby filling up the path I have been ordered to follow.
5. I have no idea when I will write to you again, or where I will be the next day!
Answer:
A.
Explanation:
some festivals is the subject therefore the weeks are the predicate
I think the similarity stated would be the same setting in Romeo and Juliet wherein Juliet pretends to be dead when she was found by her family. The scene and the painting were also taken from a dark tomb with a priest talking in front of the dead virgin and her family.
Answer:
because McCandless decided to leave the bush, but found that he could not safely cross the swollen Teklanika River due to the summer snowmelt from the glaciers.
Explanation:
I hope I helped you
The phrase is from Keats's famous Ode on a Grecian Urn. Exact lines are:
<em>Not to the sensual ear, but, more endear'd,
</em>
<em>Pipe to the spirit ditties of no tone</em>
The author tells the pipes do not play to his or physical ear, but to the metaphorical ear or in his word of his "spirit". This spiritual ear is "more endear’d," or cherished in other words. The author asks the pipes to play "ditties of no tone,". It is songs without any note or sound and that songs do not exist in the real world.