Answer:
The reader learns that Dill has no home.
Explanation:
“Grandma says he hasn’t got a home—”
“Has too, he lives in Meridian.” “—he just gets passed around from relative to relative, and Miss Rachel keeps him every summer.”
This very brief passage gives us further insight into Dill's character, and once again reminds us that things are not always as they seem.
C. Growing bigger
However, I am still not too sure.
Answer:
<h3>The main conflict of this short story is character versus society because it is society that insists upon the continuation of the lottery as a tradition.</h3>
Explanation:
Answer:
Explanation:
a)
the last lines are put in a bracket because they do not make the thoughts of the poet, and neither do they make the voice of the rain. What they contain, is the observation that the poet made as regards the course the poem is taking.
b)
reck'd or unreck'd means that whether or not you cared for the sound of the rains, if someone listened to the sound made by the rain, if someone didn't listen, whatever the case may be, it does not affect the rains and neither does it affects the poet.