Answer:
They are unwilling to help anyone but themselves.
I hope this helps!
It would honor me if you marked this brainliest :)
Answer:
Explanation:
Option A is the correct answer
When the poet witnessed the death of her canary as a child, she was not immediately moved to "tears or sadness" but was struck by the "fitness" of the burial of the canary. However, she later experienced loss as an adult and felt a deep sense of grief:
Not knowing death would be hard
Later, dark, without form or purpose.
After my first true grief I wept, was sad, was dark, . . .
After she finished grieving, she recalled her childhood response to the death of the canary. She feels that her first response was wiser, though it seems to lack sensitivity. She feels that all human experience is a form of play, and death is a kind of farewell ritual:
The yellow bird sings in my mind and I say
That the child is callous but wise, knows the purpose of play.
Answer:
1. A stereotype of a fat domestic woman who loves taking care of white people
4 Pickaninny
2. A stereotype about "uppity" black men who thinks they're much more savvy and sophisticated than they really are
6 Sambo
3. A stereotype of a loud, obnoxious, nagging black woman
3 Mammy
4. A dehumanizing stereotype of black children
5 Brute
5. A stereotype about black men that became popular after the Civil War
2
Coon
6. A stereotype of a joyful, childlike, docile black man who loves to sing and isn't too bright
1
Sapphire
Explanation:
Answer:
c) nature reminds us of what we could so easily lose through our neglect
Explanation: