Answer:
Romeo and Juliet, A Midsummer Night's Dream, The Taming of the Shrew, Macbeth, and Hamlet.
Explanation:
What they want you to do is to select one of the given prompts that they have written out for you. Either Prompt One or Prompt Two.
If I were to choose Prompt One, I would follow the instruction as given. I would Google or otherwise find and read an American short story and also a historical document as they have told me to. Once I read them both, I would proceed to follow the instruction and compare and contrast both pieces of writing with a paragraph or two as they have told me to do at the beginning.
Basically, they want you to read and write a compare and contrast little bit.
Answer: It allows society to accept TV’s projected information as natural, which makes viewers tolerate in incoherent.
Answer:
O D. He was brought there as a potential suitor for Estella.
Explanation:
Charles Dickens' <em>Great Expectations</em> tells the story of a poor orphaned boy named Pip who gets a chance to improve his standing in society through a secret benefactor. The whole book follows the childhood and adult life of the main protagonist and his life from being a blacksmith in the village to a gentleman in London's high society.
Herbert Pocket is the roommate of Pip in London and who would eventually become his friend. They had previously met in<u> Chapter XI where they fought in Miss Havisham's garden</u>. And now, their<u> reunion in chapter XXII</u> reveals the true nature of Herbert's presence at Miss Havisham's residence. <u>He had been sent for by Miss Havisham as a potential suitor for Estella</u>, which Herbert termed in his own words <em>"Affianced, [...] Betrothed. Engaged."</em> But he revealed <em>"she couldn’t,—at all events, she didn’t"</em> which led to his present life and not being provided for.