Answer:
He is described as “a thin young man with a brown face, with brown eyes and a head of tightly curled hair” which is why he is called Curley. Curley is described as dressing in a somewhat aristocratic way, as if to separate himself from the lowly ranch hands. The glove is to keep his hand soft for his wife. Curley is the boss's son, and because his father only appears once, Curley is the main representative in the novella of the land-owning class. When this revenge plan fails and he loses face, Curley picks a fight with the vulnerable Lennie to reassert his status.
Among your options, there is only one clause, and that would be A. "she got soaked walking."
When it comes to clauses, they need to have a subject (she in A), and a verb (got soaked in A). The other options don't have both the subject and the verb and thus cannot be considered clauses. There is however another clause in this sentence (because her umbrella was in her gym locker), but it is not one of your options.
The lines that use caesura in this excerpt from Emily Dickinson's "Because I Could Not Stop for Death" are the following:
We passed the School, where Children strove At Recess—in the Ring— We passed the Fields of Gazing Grain— We passed the Setting Sun— Or rather
The use of caesura in this poem marks the pace of the reader and the I of the poem. The pace and the mood of the poem is calm due to these caesura, the pauses and she has no haste.
Answer:
is there a story to go off of?
Answer:
Phillip is now blind, and everything is black. Timothy is shocked at first, but he tells Phillip that the blindness is only temporary. The same thing happened to a man in Barbados, and he got his eyesight back. Phillip's pain is gone, but he still has a good freakout.
Explanation:
that is what happened in chapter 4