In 1887, Hamlin Garland traveled from Boston to South Dakota to visit his mother and father, whom he had not seen in six years. According to his own account, the trip through farming country was a revelation. Although he had been brought up on a farm, he had never realized how wretched farmers’ lives were. The farther west he traveled, the more oppressive it became for him to see the bleakness of the landscape and the poverty of its people. When he reached his parents’ farm and found his mother living in hopeless misery, Garland’s depression turned to bitterness, and in this mood he wrote Main-Travelled Roads, a series of short stories about farm life in the Midwest.
C
Epics are lengthy and narrate events significant to a culture.
Answer:
Michael: Hey Chike, how prepared are you for the entry test?
Chike: I've done the best I can, but I don't think I'm prepared.
Michael: Where do you have difficulty?
Chike: I don't have a clue about Chemistry. I've tried to understand it, but I can't.
Michael: I could help, if you want.
Chike: No, no need. I'm going to cheat on the test.
Michael: No, that's not good.
Chike: My mind is made up, without cheating, I can't ace the test.
Michael: If you cheat and get into college, will you keep cheating? You would still meet Chemistry there.
Chike: Yeah, you're right. What time would you be free, so we can revise?
Michael: Anytime from 8.
Chike: Alright. Thank you.
Answer: D, passive voice and subjunctive mood
Explanation: just took it
Answer:
The correct answer is that it's too late to live entirely as a traditional Eskimo.
Explanation:
This question refers to the story<em> Julie of the Wolves </em>by Jean Craighead George.
This story tells the life of a girl named Miyax who belonged to the Eskimo culture.
The sad truth that this girl perceives at the very end of the novel is that it's too late to live entirely as a traditional Eskimo.
<em>My mind thinks because of you. And it thinks,
</em>
<em>on this thundering night,
</em>
<em>That the hour of the wolf and the Eskimo is over.
</em>
<em> </em>