That passage from Elizabeth Cady Stanton's autobiography impacted the passage by,
- calming the tension that was caused due to the first convention.
This phrase was culled from the autobiography, "80 Years and More: Reminiscences, 1815-1897," by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, a pioneer feminist and women's leader in the United States of America.
She mentioned the first time when the Women's Rights Convention was held and how it attracted a lot of attention and backlashes from the press thus making her feel startled and afraid.
However, another convention was organized in Rochester. The reader at this point will be anticipating another backlash, but this was doused when she said that "the first one seemed to have drawn all the fire".
This means that the first one attracted all the attacks leaving little for the second. Thus, the rising tension was quenched.
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Answer:
B. A bird is symbolic of hope. Is your answer.
The main argument of the Declaration of Independence is that the people
of a land have rights and freedoms that should not be ignored by
governments or rulers, and that if these "unalienable rights" are
ignored, the people have the right to form a society of their own. In
the case of the American colonists, they had decided that they were no
longer willing to be subjects of the British king.
The word "Neither" acts as a conjunction in this sentence.