The character Veronica Mars is a student who progresses from high school to college while moonlighting as a private investigator under the tutelage of her detective father. In each episode, Veronica solves a different stand-alone case while working to solve a more complex mystery.
Answer:
The quotation from <em>The Black Cat</em> that best supports the inference that the narrator feels he deserves to be punished for his cruelty is <u>the third one</u>: <em>“...I knew that in so doing I was committing a sin…even beyond the reach of the infinite mercy of the Most Merciful and Most Terrible God.”
</em>
Explanation:
By reading these lines we can understand how <u>the speaker in conscious about the wrong he has done.</u> He knew what he was doing and knew that was wrong and did it anyways. <u>He knew it was a sin</u>, and a big one. So big that it was "<em>beyond the reach of the infinite mercy of the Most Merciful and Most Terrible God</em>". This means that <em>he knew he deserved a punishment from God</em> that, even with His infinite mercy, wouldn't be able to forgive what he had done.
Answer:
Edgar Allan Poe: <u>Annabel Lee</u>
Robert Frost: <u>Birches</u>
Walt Whitman: <u>Come Up from the Fields Father</u>
James Russell Lowell: <u>The Courtin</u>
Anne Bradstreet: <u>Upon the Burning of Our House</u>
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow: <u>Nature</u>
Richard Armour: <u>Favorite </u>