The above question wants to assess your ability to write an essay. The way to write the essay is illustrated below.
<h3>How to write the essay?</h3>
First, you must know that a narrative essay intends to tell a story. Also, you should know that the introduction is the part of an essay where basic information is presented.
In that case, you can write your introduction as follows:
- Introduce the main subject of your essay.
- Show how the context where this subject fits.
- Show the scenario of the story the essay will present.
- Show the characters from this story.
- It is important to remember that the introduction must be a short paragraph, with 5 or 6 lines.
After this, it's important to write the body of the essay. The ending will be the conclusion of the essay.
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He attributed much of the disagreeable work at hand to Meghan's inadequacies.
Sounds very formal and detached, I think.
One characteristic of Enlightenment that is seen in this excerpt is that people should be guided by the reason and not irrational fears, however serious they may seem to be. The protagonist/author of the diary seems to be the only cool-headed person in this terrible situation. Everybody else is freaking out, running about and screaming. He notices multiple times that nobody is making any effort to actually quench the fire. He is the one who goes to warn the king and suggests that houses should be pulled down. There is one very interesting remark about Lord Mayor, who is in a panic just like everyone else: "To the King's message he cried, like a fainting woman..." Misogyny aside, this comment shows the speaker's manly, reasonable, commendable attitude. He is an active person who does something to undo the damage, and not just a passive observer or a coward who runs away in panic.
A diary entry was a fitting form during the Enlightenment period because that was the first time that the words and opinions of a more or less ordinary person were deemed important. A diary has this risk of being a subjective collection of personal impressions. But Pepys' diary pretends to be highly objective because its author sees himself as a reasonable man, important in his own right, competent enough to keep a diary and record some important things that happen around him, to other ordinary people.
C because it always depends on ethos pathos and logos
Is there a list of answers? if not, he had his lady at home, and was seriously longing to go home.