The best answer is
<span>The author uses indirect characterization to describe how Millicent feels.
While the author's description of the ceremony gives the idea that Millicent probably looks pretty gross, with egg on her head and whatnot, the passage mainly gives the reader an empathetic view into Millicent's experience.
The scene is described as sounds and sensations from Millicent's point of view. She feels her stiff hair, and the cold egg on her back, hears the stifled laughter and crunch of the egg breaking. We can imagine the intensity of the experience, blindfolded and hearing, feeling, and probably smelling the unpleasant experiences during this initiation.
In the end, the passage concludes with: "</span><span>It was all part of the ceremony." This final sentence may relay how Millicent is processing the unpleasant initiation, rationalizing that this is just a step on her way to being part of the group. </span>
Cassius wants brutus (Caesar's nephew) to kill Caesar in the senate house with a whole bunch of other senators...
Answer:
The excerpt from Ben Jonson's "Song: To Celia" that compares love to intoxication is "The thirst that from a soul doth rise Doth ask a drink divine..."
Explanation:
The poem "Song: To Celia" by Ben Jonson presents love as an addiction of the soul, he mentions in the first stanza that the Jove’s nectar and it should state that if he can have the love of Celia he would always stay away from any other pleasure or addiction but her love, these lines talk about the necessity he has to be with his beloved one.
Answer:
which book
Explanation:
book talk is mostly done by who/what
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