Answer:
Abuelito who throws coins like rain. and asks who loves him. who is dough and feathers. who is a watch and glass of water. whose hair is made of fur.
Explanation:
I just looked this up.
The three witches meet on a heath - This is how the play opens.
The witches hail Macbeth as Thane of Cawdor - It is Act 1, Scene 3
Duncan arrives at Inverness - Duncan arrives to with his attendant outside Macbeth's castle.
Lady Macbeth places the bloodstained daggers near Duncan’s guards.
Macbeth kills Duncan
Malcolm and Donalbain flee to safety - Act 2, Scene 3. When Malcolm and Donalbain flee the murder site.
Answer:
Hamilton's letter helps us to understand his commitment as the freedom of the country, but it complicates our understanding of his abolitionist position, since the letter has a more widespread than specific content in relation to African Americans.
Explanation:
Hamilton's letter reaffirms his commitment to freedom within the country. Through her I understood Hamilton's motivations to start this fight against the forces, which he believed, were oppressive and limiting for the colonies. However, the letter speaks about hope in a general way, including all citizens within America, but does not specify Hamilton's position on blacks. This within the musical complicates our understanding of Hamilton as an abolitionist, since the original letter is very specific in this regard.
Answer: The excerpt highlights the theme of the fleeting nature of life is the one by Andrew Marvell, "To His Coy Mistress."
Explanation: This excerpt from Marvell's famous poem is specifically referring to the ephemeral nature of life, since the speaker is saying that he is constantly hearing the chariot of time - which is fast since it has wings - hurrying near, and eternity is ahead of us waiting for all of us. This poem is, in fact, a call to seize the day (<em>carpe diem</em>) and enjoy the pleasures that life has to offer. The speaker is telling to his coy mistress that if time was unlimited they could wait before courting and loving each other, but it is not, so he is urging her to let him love her.
Answer:
He is writing to white Christians with the power to stop the slave trade
Explanation:
Olaudah Equiano was a notable Nigerian sold into slavery and taken to the Caribbean and then to London.
In his memoirs, he recounts how he wrote to white Christians who had the power to stop the slave trade but could not stop it because so many people were benefitting from the trade.
The treatment of slaves were inhuman and debasing as they were whipped deprived of food made to move about naked, and a lot of other injustice.
Hence, his letter was directed to white Christians who could stop the slave trade.