<u>Explanation</u><u>:</u>
In a fascinating way, Ha begins to describe that
her older brother only spotted the first white flower on the tree.
Moving over to her second brother she said he just saw only a baby papaya tree having the same size as his fist.
Getting to the last brother we're amusingly told that he did not spot anything.
Answer:
A piano
.
Explanation:
James Weldon Johnson's fictional "The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man," tells the story of a biracial man and his 'journey to understand and accept his identity. The story deals with themes of race, acceptance, and understanding one's real identity.
While the narrator seemed confused about who his real father is and why he is not with them, he also gets to meet him and even shows his musical prowess. A couple of weeks after he met his father for the first time, he got a piano delivered to their residence. At first, he was confused, revealing he almost<em> "[told] the men on the wagon that they had made a mistake"</em>, his mother told him that it was actually a gift from his father.
Thus, the gift was a piano, <em>"a beautiful, brand-new, upright piano."</em>
It could mean that he wants to prevent his son from seeing the monkey's paw.
<h2>I believe the answer is... Keesha, please pass the butter</h2>
If the mother goes to the capital to give her speech she would take the kids with her or leave them at home