Answer:
A metaphor is a comparison of two different things that does not include the word "like" or "as" in the comparison
Explanation:
l try my best
Answer:
Stevenson wanted to say that this poem was extremely striking and so profound that it can reach very remote points of the human soul.
I believe that the poem is chilling as a whole and that no part stands out, because all its lines are equally striking.
Explanation:
When Stevenson states that "the furthest reaches of disdain and rage ... bereft of all 'normal human feelings," she means that what she has just read is something very strong and loaded with meaning, capable of touching the reader of grandly. That's because the poem is extremely deep and can reach very remote parts of the soul and trigger feelings so strong and obscure that the beds didn't even know they had them.
Answer:George cannot imagine getting a place of his own without Lennie. So that dream is over, and Candy too has nothing more to look forward to. Candy is overcome with sadness and disappointment, and he takes his emotions out on Curley's dead wife, calling her a lousy tart' (chapter 5), and begins to cry.
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Answer:
Every time someone recalls a memory, there will be something slightly different about the memory than the last time the person was remembering it
Explanation:
Every time someone recalls a memory, there will be something slightly different about the memory than the last time the person was remembering it
^ You need this part to be past tense because it is talking about the past.