Shut up!!!!
lol jk sorry if you were offended stranger
Answer:
Transcendentalism texts and dark Romanticism, like Jane Austen and Edgar Allen Poe
This question is incomplete. Here's the complete question.
Read The Lady Or The Tiger?, by Frank Stockton
How did the king keep from feeling guilty about this form of justice? *
a. He did not watch the festivities.
b. He made his daughter in charge of signaling judgement
c. He said the criminals made their own choices, not him.
d. He was barbaric and just did not feel guilty.
Answer: c. He said the criminals made their own choices, not him.
Explanation:
The arena of the king was meant as a device of poetic justice, where a crime was punished, or virtue rewarded, depending on what was thought to be an impartial test. Given the chance to choose one out of two doors, the criminal would face either the punishment of a tiger´s attack or the reward of a woman to get married to. Whether they would be punished or rewarded was established based on their own choice, making the King feel like has no responsibility for the result.
This question is about "Young Goodman Brown"
Answer:
The reality presented by the author means that the character does not know if what he is experiencing is a dream or not. The reader also has this doubt, which ends up creating the mystery of the work.
Explanation:
"Young Goodman Brown" is set in Salem at the time of the witch hunt in the region. In this story, Goodman Brown leaves his family for a mysterious mission in the forest. In this mission, the author exposes the discrepancy between the goodness and the badness of the human being, portraying a complex, fragmented and symbolic reality, which makes Goodman Brown unable to know whether he is dreaming or not. This mystery is so wide open that it infects even the reader.
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."