Answer:
<h2>We’ve got a job: the 1963 childrens match</h2>
In 1958, when he was nine, his mother got a job as a dental assistant – and a raise. At about the same time, Wash got a job, too. Six days a week for eight years, he woke up by four o'clock in the morning to deliver milk. By the time he got to school each day, he'd already put in almost half a day's work.
How does this excerpt help readers make a personal connection to the story?
Explanation:
1 by connecting readers to his mother’s medical training.
2 by connecting readers to the milk-delivery business.
3 by connecting readers to Wash’s academic success.
4 by connecting readers to Wash’s daily work routine.
N =3.
Because, 4 x 160 = 640. To get the answer 643, you have to add 3. Which n =3.
The era of romanticism examines the dark side of human nature and deals with the unconscious. It relates to the idea that everything is individual. During the 1860’s in the U. S. society is confused because everything is changing; Civil War, emancipation of slavery, etc. The system as people know it is being reworked and we see people who were once oppressed, now experiencing freedoms never thought possible. Whitman creates imagery in his poetry, and his poetry creates an idealized image of America, an America made up of the working people. His poetry, imagery, and idealism create a world larger than life...a world the reader can actually see and feel through his poetry.