Answer:
Douglass did not write this text to reflect on his personal development but rather to argue that slavery should be abolished. In the Narrative, he explicitly and implicitly responds to the positions of people who supported or were indifferent to slavery. Through the episodes he tells, Douglass conveys his position that slavery was terrible (not just mildly unpleasant) for slaves, that it corrupted (not helped) slave owners, and that as an institution, it was abhorrent (not necessary). It is worth noting that this last position is the hardest to trace and analyze.
Explanation:
Explanation:
The poem conveys the message that childrem need to be allowed more liberty. Excessive nagging makes them defiant and they turn a deaf ear to the instructions of the elders. They develop a kind of dislike for real life and start escaping into the world of dreams and imagination
<em>HOPE IT HELP FUL</em>
Hi Adam <3
The closest mood to the paragraph would probably be B, curiosity. Hope this helps, byeee
Answer:
the reason they begin and end with
D Point of View identifies the perspective from which a story is told
Point of view can be first person (from the character's perspective using the pronouns 'me', 'my'), can be second person (using words 'you') or third person (typcially a narrator and uses the pronouns 'he', 'she', 'they')