Answer:
Intro: thesis, introduce 3 main points
Body paragraphs 1-3: 1 main point for each paragraph, expand upon main point, provide evidence, explain impact of evidence, repeat, conclude paragraph with a strong statement
Conclusion: restate thesis, briefly go over 3 main points, strong closing decree.
Answer: When I read it silently, I tend to skip some words and minor details of the passage, but still understand the picture of what is happening in the passage.
Explanation:
False assumptions about people cause bias and bias about people cause assumptions.
I seem to remember that in Macbeth, the first witch says, " Lesser than Macbeth, and greater." While the second witch says, " Not so happy, yet so much happier."
This site should give you more info: https://www.cliffsnotes.com/literature/m/macbeth/summary-and-analysis/act-i-scene-3<span>
Hope this helps</span>
<span>Bradstreet was an avowed Puritan, and her poems almost always evoke God, her faith, and/or her desire for eternal life. Her marriage fulfilled the Puritan ideal of a loving, respectful partnership, and she embraced the traditional feminine role of motherhood. However, through her poems, Bradstreet demonstrates her fortitude through the vicissitudes of life and shares her contemplations on God’s grace and might. When she suffers from some kind of pain or tragedy, she tries to place it within the larger context of God’s will, and reminds herself to turn her thoughts heavenward. She regularly explores the tension between the joy of her Earthly life and is not always willing to abjure it in favor of her putative eternal life. She always comes to the conclusion that Heaven is superior to Earth, but she shares her thought process with the reader, which is what makes her work so relatable four centuries after her death.</span>