Answer:
In Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift, Gulliver's adventures and experiences ... Pride and arrogance are reoccurring themes that make up the most of Swift's satire
Montresor tells all of his servants that they must stay in the house. He also tells him that he is going out and will not return until much later. Since the story takes place during a popular festival, the servants want to leave and join the partying. Montresor knows that if he tells the servants he won't be back for a while the servants will leave the house anyways. Since he is not there to make sure that they are doing what he's asked, the servants will go off and do whatever they want.
<span>The diction in the closing two lines of the poem, “Those Winter Sundays”, suggest that the speaker:
</span>
d) has a belated feeling of acknowledgement for a father’s love
The speaker then realized that all the hard work done by his father was all for his love for him and his job.
Answer:
D. Boo Radley's father
Explanation:
In the exceprt from "To Kill A Mockingbird," by Harper Lee, Ms. Maudie criticizes Boo Radley's father. The reason is that Mr. Radley's sense of right and wrong was so strict and severe that it made him punish Boo in a cruel and excessive manner. As a consequence, Boo has become a recluse who lives a solitary life and tends to avoid other people.