<em><u>sorry</u></em><em><u> </u></em><em><u>I don't</u></em><em><u> </u></em><em><u>know </u></em><em><u>.</u></em><em><u>.</u></em><em><u>.</u></em>
<em><u>and </u></em><em><u>pls </u></em><em><u /></em>
<span>The organizational structure that the author is using in this passage from "Everest" is </span><span>Chronological Order of importance. This author used this in order to explain to the readers the sequences of events that are important in the story just to organize its thoughts.</span>
They can't work/function on their own... and they're short. Hope this helps!
Its internal because she is doubting that the drought will work or not, her dilemma is that she thinks that the potion that will make her appear dead will either not work or actually kill her.
Answer:
Edgar Allan Poe: <u>Annabel Lee</u>
Robert Frost: <u>Birches</u>
Walt Whitman: <u>Come Up from the Fields Father</u>
James Russell Lowell: <u>The Courtin</u>
Anne Bradstreet: <u>Upon the Burning of Our House</u>
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow: <u>Nature</u>
Richard Armour: <u>Favorite </u>