Answer: To persuade
Explanation:
The speaker is implying that there will be unpleasant consequences if one does not study the problem carefully, and they are trying to persuade you to do so to avoid unnecessary consequences.
In looking at the answer choices, a few can be dismissed immediately. From the passage it doesn't seem that the dismissal of the narrator's questions affects her too much. Therefore we can eliminate answers that show a drastic change in the narrator's emotions (the narrator feeling inadequate, lacking control, and fearing she may be doomed). The only answer left is that the narrator is dismissed. In gothic literature women are often seen as helpless, innocent victims.
The words from stanza VI, "And that imperial palace whence he came" have the following effect on the tone of the poem:
A) The palace represents a child's idyllic perspective on life, setting a melancholy tone.
William Wordsworth describes how miserable we grow to be as we get older. The palace he talks about is how a child sees life: pure, joyful, always exciting. However, life itself takes that palace away from us as we experience life in its naked entirety, with all the setbacks, sorrow, pain and misery. The author believes we all come from God, and that we are born with the wonders of Heaven floating above us. Losing such eagerness to live and smile is a melancholic perspective. That is why Christ says in the New Testament that in order to enter the Kingdom of Heaven, one must be like a child.
Answer:
Ruth Ginsburg was important because she was one of few women in the Supreme Court. She never let any young women who looked up to her down.
Explanation: She was chosen by the president of her time to work as a Supreme Court Judge.