Explanation:
I think the first one is the answer
Well one way is foreshadowing, it gives you a hint to the future.
The correct answer is D. [A]nd at his death wiped from his icy brow the cold death-sweat. . . .
Explanation:
In writing, imagery involves using detailed descriptions to represent vividly certain elements the author includes. This makes the reader imagine accurately the situation or element describe. This occurs in "And at his death wiped from his icy brow the cold death-sweat. . . " because the use of descriptive details such as "icy brow" and "cold death-sweat" are specific enough to allow the reader imagine precisely the scene in which the great-grandmother wipes the sweat of his master as his died.
Answer:
The correct answer is that it's too late to live entirely as a traditional Eskimo.
Explanation:
This question refers to the story<em> Julie of the Wolves </em>by Jean Craighead George.
This story tells the life of a girl named Miyax who belonged to the Eskimo culture.
The sad truth that this girl perceives at the very end of the novel is that it's too late to live entirely as a traditional Eskimo.
<em>My mind thinks because of you. And it thinks,
</em>
<em>on this thundering night,
</em>
<em>That the hour of the wolf and the Eskimo is over.
</em>
<em> </em>