<span>makes light of Romeo’s heartache.</span>
Answer:
Third person limited
The narrator uses the word was because they know what Sebastian is doing
Answer:
Jem was shocked and astonished to hear that one of the jurors was a Cunningham.
Atticus told him that the Cunninghams are good bunch who would be on your side once you earned their respect.
Atticus suggestes that people can change if they know more about the people and the issue. The late night incident at the jail must have changed Mr. Cunningham's view which in turn also led to the stand of the Cunnigham juror siding with Tom.
Explanation:
Jem's reaction to Atticus' revelation that one of Tom's jury was a Cunningham was that of shock and astonishment, added with the fact that he actually asked for an outright acquittal of Tom. He was also rather confused as to why he would do that, <em>"One minute they’re tryin‘ to kill him and the next they’re tryin’ to turn him loose… I’ll never understand those folks as long as I live</em>." (Chapter 23, To Kill A Mockingbird)
Atticus explained to them the Cunninghams are one of the most respectable family who will do what is right irrespective of what the majority people may think or want. And they also keep their word, so if they have respect for someone, that will run till they die, "<em>once you earned their respect they were for you tooth and nail".</em>
Atticus suggested that an individual can be persuaded to change his stance when he mentioned that the night the mob came to the jail to torment Tom, Mr. Cunningham may have felt a sense of respect for the way Scout dealt with him. That night, Scout told Mr. Cunnigham that she attended the same school as his son and that he was a good son. this must have changed his perspective of the Finches for not only did he led the mob to leave, he also seems to have told the Cunningham juror about it for he also changed his stance on Tom's case.
Frederick Douglass, 1818-1895, was an African American who sought throughout his life to bring social reform to the U.S and to stop slavery and its consequences not just on the African American people, but on the entire nation at large. Having been a slave himself, he escaped bondage and gained his freedom after escaping to England and Ireland thanks to the education he attained from his former owner. He also became an orator and dedicated his life to the abolition movement. In this particular speech, given on the ocassion of a Fourth of July celebration, Douglass does not so much expound on the greatness that means celebrating this national holiday of independence but rather on the fact that not all Americans, including African Americans, can enjoy it because some are still tied through slavery. He mentions the fact that he was basically coarced to speak on this day as if he were also a part of it, happy for it, but in truth he decides to show his listeners that he is first, and foremost, black and he sides with slaves completely. Because of his choice in this matter, of making people aware of who and what he is and was, he says clearly, from the 3rd paragraph, lines 1 through 16, that celebrating the 4th of July with them, when so many of his brethren suffer bondage would be treason. This is why, the correct answer is C.