A
Not correct. She could have been using references to anything. Not all her references are from literature. Southern Bitter Wormwood is a reference to the wormwood plant which is medicinal in nature and it is very bitter.
C
Maybe. But there's a better answer. It's not her personality we are drawn to although it is quite bubbly if this passage is any kind of indication. It is the joy she takes in recognizing that Beowulf likes a good drink and he wanted her to join him and she was delighted by the invitation.
D
She could have been talking about anything that engaged her. It just happened to be mostly about the classics.
B
This is the best answer. C and D are close, but it really is B that we are attracted to. We have our eyes opened to the grand people in books. More than that we feel her joy in Beowulf, her polite tea conversation with Oliver Twist, her astonishing acceptance of the meaning of Sydney Carton's statement at the end of a Tale of Two Cities.
Zitkála-Šá travelled with several other children to a missionary school in the east. She was treated much differently at school than at home, which caused her anxiety and pain. On her first night at the school, she cried herself to sleep, grieving the absence of her mother and aunt. Thus, option "B" is correct.
<h3> What was the land of apples like?</h3>
Zitkala-Sa's first day in the land of apples was a sore-cold one. The snow the land and the trees were empty. A large bell rang for breakfast, its loud metallic sound smashing into their sharp ears.
Thus, option "B" is correct.
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Answer:
One conflict in chapter one of the outsiders is between Ponyboy and the Socs.
Explanation:
One pulls out a blade and asks Ponyboy if he needs a haircut, a fight begins and Ponyboy is pinned and punched multiple times in the face. The Greaser's soon show up and the Socs run away.
Answer :
C. Factors to consider as part of the historical context of Hannah's poetry would include all the following except having her life depicted in a film.
Hannah Senesh was born in Budapest, Hungary on July 17, 1921 to a rich and prominent Hungarian Jewish family. Her father was a renowned writer and dramatist. Living in the 1940s and being exposed to the anti-semitist (anti-jewish) movement left a profound impact on her poetry,diary and plays. All these factors drove her to learn more about her jewish history and this reflects in her poems, especially the famous "Walking to Caesarea."
I think it would be “who weren’t able to go on the field trip”