The second option is correct.
The melancholy in the tone emphasizes the effects of the grief and the grieving described in the excerpt.
Answer:
The best and the correct answer among the choices provided by the question is the second choice.
The author’s viewpoint toward the actual Rosetta Stone in "The Rosetta Stone” is that it is a historical artifact that scholars spent too much time trying to understand.
I hope my answer has come to your help. Have a nice day ahead and may God bless you always!
Read more on Brainly.com - brainly.com/question/2385815#readmore
Explanation:
Answer:
I'm sorry, I haven't read the book myself but I can help you with numbers 1 and 3.
#1: C, Personification. The wind cannot really be angry, so it is personification.
#3: C; To describe Billy's anger. This sentence is comparing his anger to the water boiling in "Mama's teakettle".
Again, sorry I can't answer the other ones. :/
Is this off a book or something you need to be more specific
Answer:
Mrs. Schachter kept screaming "fire" even though she was getting beaten for it because she had foreseen what will happen to them, the Jews. She is like a warning for what will be the fate of the people and how most of them will end up.
Explanation:
The memoir <em>Night </em>by Elie Weisel tells the story of how the Jews were discriminated against and treated inhumanely by the German Nazis. The book became one of the most read and first-person accounts of the horrors of the Holocaust, one of the greatest genocide in world history.
Mrs. Schachter and the captured Jews were stuffed into the cattle cars and transported to other camps for their imprisonment. She was with her ten-year-old son. Along the way, she began screaming <em>"Fire! I see a fire! I see a fire! [. . . .] This terrible fire. Have mercy on me"</em>. This happened not just once or twice but more than thrice. She was badly beaten up for causing panic among them and was even gagged. But she kept on shouting about the fire.
Her 'vision' of the fire seems to be the<u> foreshadowing of the fate of the Jews</u>. Most of them will be put in the chamber and burned. She seems to foresee what will happen to them. And even though she was beaten up for shouting and claiming she saw a fire, she kept on repeating her claim to warn them of their fate, which, unfortunately wasn't understood by the people at that time.