Answer:
Pages 139-141 show the giver telling a painful story about a woman he loved and who was selected as a receiver of memories. Although the romance did not end happily, it gave the giver the memory of someone special and gave him more experience in helping his next friends, who would also be selected as recipients of memories.
Explanation:
"The giver" is a dystopia where young people are selected to keep the memories of humanity, especially the memories of pain and suffering, which the population does not want to have. Although this society seems to be utopian, it proves to be dystopian, since it removes the experiences of humanity, forcing them to live in sameness and causes suffering for the people who will keep these memories and carry the "weight" of the world on their backs.
The poem "Anecdote of the Jar" doesn't follow a particular end rhyme scheme. Stevens repeats the word hill in the first stanza and Tennessee in the the first and last lines of the poem. He also rhymes the word air with everywhere and bare. Stevens uses internal rhyme in the poem with words such as round, surround, and ground. The lack of traditional rhyme schemes and structure gives the poem a wild and free feel, which mirrors the wilderness described in the poem.
Answer:
A
Explanation:
You didn't provide the excerpt but if it's the one I found online, I think A would make the most sense as the passage is primairly based around his own actions. If not A, then D would be second choice I think.
Answer:
D. Fourier inspired Champollion to decipher the writings on the Rosetta Stone.
Explanation: Edge