"I was the first 'welcome-to-our-state' Floridian ... " (paragraph 3)
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In this poem, the author describes the "music" that the movement of the black girl brings to our ears. He talks about the way in which the girl's playing makes her braids move, and he describes this musicality by using words such as "symphony","crescendo", and "movement." These words are employed as imagery, and their effect is that they create an image in the mind of the reader. This image contributes to the meaning of the poem by portraying the vivacity and cheerfulness of the girl.
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Maybe you could use something along the lines of:
”By noticing patterns in a child’s behavior, frequent signs of bruising and otherwise, you may consider the possibility of a child being abused.”
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I hope that revisits the hook and I hope it helps!
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While the Revolutionary period still carried widespread beliefs of Christianity, they valued science along with reasoning. This was because of the influence of the enlightenment and new scientific theories and probabilities introduced into the modern world of religion and science. Meanwhile, the Puritans tended to lean towards traditional beliefs or points of view that are accepted with unthinking conventional reverence. During the revolutionary period ideas were opened rather than shunned away when discredited by religion.
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The house, a very large mansion the pair inherited from their grandparents, is a large building divided in two living segments. At the entrance one enters a vestibule leading to the atrium, which consists of a living room, two bedrooms on either sides and, separated by a corridor, the kitchen and a bathroom. The second half of the house, entered through a massive oak door, contains the brother’s library, three other bedrooms and a dining room. Due to the disproportions between the surface of the residence and the daily needs of the two inhabitants, the second segment is entered only for cleaning purposes or for the occasional retrieving of a book from the library.
The monotony of domestic life ends abruptly when the brother hears distinct -yet dissimilar- sounds coming from the second section of the large house. Promptly closing the door, in order to keep whatever is there from coming through, the brother tells his sister that “They’ve taken over the back part.” Although saddened by the loss of part of their belongings, the circustamce appears to the two rather unremarkable, (“happened so simply and without fuss”), like being something they were already waiting, from entities they knew would have come.
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