The antigone's first words to the king are "My own flesh and blood".
Answer:
6/18/2022
43, Terre Street
Chennai - 45
Dear Ram,
Hoping you are doing good in life? The purpose of this letter is to showcase the experiences that I encountered on visiting Delhi for the first time. I must admit the hospitality of the people really left me stunned.
They are so friendly that it made me feel away from home. Even the city is bestowed with numerous tourist attractions like the Parliament House, Qutab Minar that you cannot afford to miss.
Yours lovingly
Rakesh
The answer to the following question is "Pathos"
The answer is:
d. thy firmness makes my circle just/and makes me end
In John Donne's poem "A Valediction Forbidding Mourning," the author intends to express his desire to have a peaceful death in which his wife does not mourn him. He suggests their love is so strong that it goes beyond the physical state and will continue after death. Morever, he compares their love to a compass - his wife is the foot of the compass, which helps him create a perfect circle. As a result, he implies his wife's strength makes him complete and have a dignified and respectable death.
The correct answer is C, as the Narrative of Sojourner Truth was published in 1850, eleven years before the Civil War. As it tells the story of the life of Sojourner Truth until that year, it has to take place before it.
Sojourner Truth (1797 - 1883) was an abolitionist and activist for women's rights. Truth was born under slavery, but escaped with her daughter in 1826. After turning to the courts to recover her son, she became the first black woman to win a trial against a white man. Sojourner's birth name was Isabella ("Bell") Baumfree. She changed her name to Sojourner Truth in 1843. She is widely known for her speech "Ain't I a Woman?", Which was pronounced in 1851 at the "Ohio Women's Rights Convention" in Akron, Ohio. During the American Civil War Truth helped in the recruitment of black troops for the American Navy. After the war, she tried unsuccessfully to obtain land grants from the Federal State for former slaves.