Answer:
"Sonnet 130" details the beauty of the mistress but all in the negative way. The comparison of the features, the breath, the hair, the cheeks etc all are shown to be the worst of what they are supposed to be. All these details about the mistress pokes fun at the very essence of a sonnet form.
Explanation:
William Shakespeare's "Sonnet 130" is quite unlike the regular sonnet form. This sonnet rather demerits the beauty of the lover, while sonnets are most famous for their romantic love themes. Shakespeare's sonnet instead labels everything about the lover as the worst or in the bad light.
Sonnet 130 begins with the description of the mistress' eyes as nothing like the sun. Then he moves on to list the bad qualities of all that is seen in the mistress. He makes her features seem less ideal, demeaning their importance and significance.
Except for the last couplet <em>"And yet, by heaven, I think my love as rare
/ As any she belied with false compare"</em>, the whole sonnet in itself is a parody/ satire of the sonnet form.
C.
Brutus is highly respected, and Cassius knows that joining with Brutus will give the conspirators credibility.
Hi=hello=bonjour
<u>hi means hi when you talk to a friend
</u>
But your question has no information
Hello. You forgot to mention that this question is about "The Glass Castle".
Answer:
The author decided to include the scene with Dinitia and the pool to show how the blacks who already suffered a lot of discrimination were more tolerant of people with bad life situations. This is a defining moment in Jeannette's life, because it allows her to befriend and allows her to recognize tolerant, friendly and good behaviors.
Explanation:
The Glass Castle is a book written by Jeannette Walls, where she tells the stories of her childhood, living in a dangerous environment, with dysfunctional parents and intense family problems. In this story the author Jeannette tells how the other children refused her company at the pool because they said that she lived in the garbage (the house she lived in was very old and worn out) and that it would be a source of illness, since she had a family situation and economics so bad. Jeannette is very sad about the situation, but finds a friendship with Dinitia who says that she can use the pool with black children.
Jeannette is well received by black people who use the pool, since they understand what it is like to be discriminated against, besides, she makes a good friendship with Dinitia, which influences her childhood positively.