Options B, E, and H are the ones that manage to develop the idea that things, objects inside a house are a burden.
These options are:
- B. There was nothing in the house to demand care to claim attention consciousness with its insistent and change in companionship
- E. This did not have to be taken down and put up in a arranged and dusted and cared for
- H. If we could but free ourselves once for all, how simple life might become!
The text shows how the narrator when arriving at a house, with very little furniture and objects, feels at peace and happy.
She doesn't feel the need to furnish the house, because she thinks it would end the peace the house provided.
The house established a calm that she had never felt before and she began to realize that this was because the house did not promote the obligation to clean, care and preserve the objects, as this was a great burden.
More information about "The Tyranny of Things" at the link:
brainly.com/question/24311055
The main purpose of the use of repetition in the lines is the one we see in the statement below:
It forces the audience to examine their ideas about African American women.
By asking repeatedly "ain't I a woman?", the speaker forces the audience to reconsider the way they see African American women, since back in the days of slavery they were often regarded as merchandise and nothing else. By comparing herself to a man, the speaker means that since she can do all a man is able to, she is indeed of great value, and must be seen as a human being whose gender is female. In other words, she wants to be acknowledged for what she is in every sense. That's why what she says has the objective of making the audience ponder about how they see African American women.
Living is the correct adjective
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