<em>What did you least like about Hamilton in this unit?</em>
<em>Well, this is an opinion that you have to answer on your own but if you still need help I'll just tell you my opinion that I least liked about Hamilton.</em>
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One bad thing that he did was have an affair with Maria Reynolds. Not only was he blackmailed about it, and paid up, he also published a 95-paged-pamphlet on it, which, in the musical, was called The Reynolds Pamphlet (I believe that it had a different/longer name historically).
The musical also implies that Hamilton gave two pistols to his 19-year-old son and told him what to do when he dueled another man. This resulted in his son getting shot, thus, killed. Not a very good thing for a dad to do.<em>
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Reverend Dimmesdale saying "Come, my little Pearl" is significant because it is his public confession that Pearl is his daughter.
After he finishes his sermon,<u> Reverend Dimmesdale shows people that he is not 'the holiest man in New England' as everyone thinks by revealing that Pearl, Hester's daughter, is his illegitimate child</u>. When he tells his secret, Hester and Pearl stand by his side and both of them are witness of the A that he has carved into his skin, which symbolizes that the Reverend is a sinner. After he confesses his sin and asks for forgiveness, Reverend Dimmesdale dies on the scaffold.
The Social Contract and Government
The fundamental basis for government and law in this system is the concept of the social contract, according to which human beings begin as individuals in a state of nature, and create a society by establishing a contract whereby they agree to live together in harmony for their mutual benefit, after which they are said to live in a state of society. This contract involves the retaining of certain natural rights, an acceptance of restrictions of certain liberties, the assumption of certain duties, and the pooling of certain powers to be exercised collectively.
Written sources go back to about 5500 years ago, when marketers started using labels to keep books and accounts.
The original markings were in the form of thumbnails and symbols, and different ways of writing developed in different cultures. The discovery of the letter, at a time when the first civilizations were occurring around the world, marks the end of prehistory. From the moment people invented the letter, written clues about their lives and activities became part of everyday life: receipts and bills were written, contracts were signed, significant events, laws and literary works were recorded. It was the beginning of written history.
Explanation:
- The original method of writing probably evolved from the clay marks used by traders in Mesopotamia.
- Around 3500 BC. e. The markings were stamped on the surface of the clay ball, marking the type and quantity of goods, and a few hundred years later Mesopotamians began to use sticks to leave wedge marks on moist clay tablets.
- Essential tables are sun-dried to be stored in libraries. The tags grew into a letter called cuneiform, which has been in use for almost 3300 years.
Class: History
Level: Middle school
Keywords: written sources, Mesopotamia, cuneiform, letter
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