<span>She was the last of the passengers to B. Alight, and when I got her into the carriage she looked not unlike one of those charred, smoked bodies that firemen lift from the debris of a burned building.</span>
Answer:
improved academic performance
an effective use of time
remembering information
better performance in extra-curricular activities
Answer:
Emeline Larcom was the sister of Lucy Larcom (a well known New England poet, essayist, and editor). One of ten children, she grew up in the Massachusetts coastal town of Beverly -- located just north of Boston. Her father was a sea captain who was often away from home. With his untimely death in 1832, his wife, Lois Larcom, was forced to seek out employment to maintain her large family; she found it in the mill town of Lowell. She relocated to the community with her younger children in 1835, and took charge of a boardinghouse, working for the Lawrence Manufacturing Company. Soon, four of her daughters also took up employment with the firm � working inside the mills. Emiline was one of them. Sometime between 1837 and 1840, Lois Larcom returned to Beverly. Several of her daughters, including Emiline, remained in the mill. Emiline worked for the Lawrence Company until her marriage in 1843.
Explanation:
A·loof
əˈlo͞of/
adjective
not friendly or forthcoming; cool and distant.
"they were courteous but faintly aloof"
synonyms:distant, detached, unfriendly, antisocial,unsociable, avoidant, remote, unapproachable,formal, stiff, withdrawn, reserved, unforthcoming,uncommunicative, unsympathetic;
informalstandoffish
"part of their strategy is to remain aloof during the first stages of negotiation"
conspicuously uninvolved and uninterested, typically through distaste.
"he stayed aloof from the bickering"
Answer:
The correct answer is option C: "unconventional style".
Explanation:
The poem "A narrow fellow in the grass" by Emily Dickinson focuses in the life of wild animals. Dickinson tells the story of a man that had an encounter with a snake when he was a child. The way the author describes the snake in the poem is by using an unconventional style since she does not follow any particular rhythm or form. This can be noticed since the first four lines of the poem: "A narrow fellow in the grass; Occasionally rides; You may have met him—did you not; His notice sudden is;..."