<span>3 The speaker imagines that angels have arrived and spread perfume in the room.
1 The speaker watches as the raven flies in and perches on the bust of Pallas.
2 The speaker is amused by the royal appearance of the bird and asks the bird its name.
7 The speaker feels like his soul is trapped in the raven’s shadow.
4 The speaker asks the raven if he’ll ever get over the misery of losing his love, Lenore.
6 The speaker gets angry at the Raven and shouts at it to fly away.
5 The speaker wants to know if he’ll ever meet Lenore in Heaven.</span>
Answer:
There really is no right answer to either of these but if you are asking what we would do, I would flip the switch for the first one and leave the woman because im selfish and if its crowded there are tons of other people to help
Explanation:
( and yes I know my answer to the second one is mean )
I’m unable to answer without seeing a passage.
Answer:
Connell tells his story in an understated fashion, most often allowing the events to speak for themselves. He does, however, at times interject his own opinions, and he makes it clear that his is a modernist perspective: The battle is finally more absurd than heroic, more pitiful than romantic.
Explanation: oof- someone said this already