As per women’s point of view, to protect Mrs. Wright, Mrs. Hale and Mrs. Peters decide to hide<u> the dead bird</u>.
The play “Trifles” by Susan Glaspell deals with the issues of the women. The identity of a women is mocked by the men in the play who believe a woman can only be recognized by her husband’s identity. The female characters in the play are named by their husband’s name. the moment when Mrs. Hale and Mrs. Peters understood the murder mystery, they decided to hide the evidence. They found the pet dead the same way as her husband. Hence, they concluded with the idea to hide the evidence to rescue Mrs. Wright as she was the suspect of her husband’s murder.
1. He agreed to abdicate and retire in favor of the next in line for the throne
2. My sister always treated me like I was a blight on the family name.
3. He was blithe about the risks to his health.
4. He led an ephemeral electronic existence.
5. Their fervid attacks on image worship led
to their expulsion.
6. I refuse to use the fetid public bathroom
that looks and smells as though it has not been cleaned in months.
7. A small Colombian flag was neatly tucked in his open mouth.
8. He had much taste and love for music, and considerable gifts as an orator of a florid type.
9. She picked the flower up and poked it over her left ear.
10. People who are nice and gullible are always taken advantage of.
11. irascible doctor who is offended by his presence beats him to within an inch of his life.
12. He feared the ignominy of being exposed as a spy.
13. She kept on lamenting and crying, continued the woman.
14. He shows a monastic dedication to his job.
15. The shares were sold for well below their nominal value.
16. Because she is a chef, she notices every nuance of flavor in the meal.
17. The beginnings of his doctrine of cellular pathology date from the earliest period in his career.
18. It is a defence against sedition and socialism.
19. This argument is rather specious than sound.
20. They were once looked down upon as the tawdry poor relations of the fashion industry.
Answer:
d) The casualties in Vietnam
Explanation:
Kinnell doesn't set out to write a politically charged poem, but the connections he makes lead him in that direction, nonetheless. While living in a Vietnamese hamlet, the narrator of the poem Vapor Trail Reflected in the Frog Pond hears "America Singing," a song composed of the crunching of weapons and the buzz of a bomber jet. Thus, it contrasts conflict with tranquility by depicting a bomber against a tranquil background of the loss.
A condition where a part of your body becomes swollen, red, and often painful