Answer:
It shows that Reverend Hale feels guilty for his role in the trials.
Explanation:
This line is spoken by Reverend Hale in Act IV of "The Crucible" (1953) by Arthur Miller.
Mr. Hale says this line to Danforth that there is blood on his head. It means he (Mr. Hale) feels guilty for his role in the trial. He feels himself responsible for the death of so many innocent people before Act IV and for those who are to be hanged after that. Although Mr. Hale had got a feeling in about Act II that the accused were innocent, but he could not stand for them, and when he did, it was too late. For this reason Reverend Hale considers himself responsible for the death of innocent people and feels blood on his head.
"Can you not see the blood on my head" just emphasizes the first sentence of the line.
Since this line is spoken by Reverend Hale, so no answer option concerning Parris, Abigail, and John Proctor can be correct
The answer is a. have a nice day
Answer:
On the first day of school, Victor stood in line half an hour before he came to a
wobbly card table. He was handed a packet of papers and a computer card on which he listed his
one elective1
, French. He already spoke Spanish and English, but he thought some day he might
travel to France, where it was cool; not like Fresno, where summer days reached 110 degrees in
the shade. There were rivers in France, and huge churches, and fair-skinned people everywhere,
the way there were brown people all around Victor
Answer:
Justice is not served to the wealthy the same way it is to the poor.
Explanation:
The quote we are studying here is an excerpt from "King Lear", by Shakespeare. It is exposing the different treatment given to rich and poor when it comes to justice. According to this quote, the rich get away with anything, never truly having to own up to their crimes, vices, or mistakes. The lance of justice breaks when it tries to pierce their fancy robes. In other words, money can buy impunity. On the other hand, the poor are easily punished, maybe even more than they truly deserve. A straw can pierce their rags. No matter how small their crime, they are surely going to pay for it with much more suffering than that crime really called for.
Answer:
B. He will die before giving up on the marlin.
Explanation:
The quote. "But man is not made for defeat. A man can be destroyed, but not defeated." This means that a man can beaten up so much that he can barely walk, or can be taking his last breath but he will never be defeated or loose anything as long as he tries.