Answer
One of the central themes of "The Necklace" is that of appearance vs. reality. For Mathilde, the necklace symbolizes wealth, beauty, and, ultimately, shame, as she loses the necklace and goes into debt to replace it. The great irony of the story is that the necklace was a fake. Mathilde spends ten years in debt, effectively ruining her life over nothing.
The Declaration was intended for a wide audience and is written in a more powerful, persuasive style. The Bill of Rights was intended as a legal document while the Declaration carried no legal significance. The Bill of Rights was intended for delegates and lawmakers and is written in a more precise, technical style.
Symbolic Archetypes
Here are examples:
Light - Hope or renewal
Dark - Despair or ignorance
Water - Birth and life
Haven - Safety
Wilderness - Danger
Fire - Knowledge, rebirth
Ice - Death, ignorance
Black - Evil, mystery
Red - Passion, blood
Green - The earth, growth
White - Purity, peace, innocence
Three - Trinity; mind, body, spirit
Four - Seasons, elements
Square - Stability
Circle - Heaven, perfection, eternity
Spiral - Cosmic motion, growth
Clouds - Mystery
Crescent moon - Change
Lightning - Inspiration
Hourglass - Time passing
Heart - Love
Answer:
John Steinbeck.
Explanation:
John Ernst Steinbeck Jr, an American writer famous for his works on the lives of the people living during and around the Dust Bowl, said in his Nobel acceptance speech in 1962 that
"<em>The ancient commission of the writer has not changed. He is charged with exposing our many grievous faults and failures, with dredging up to the light our dark and dangerous dreams for the purpose of improvement</em>."
His speech was a form of relaying a message that writers like him had to do in order to make known to people the various but harsh realities of life. His take on the migrant farmers' lives during the Dust Bowl in "The Grapes of Wrath" gave him a huge credit for revealing the truth and the lives led by these farmers.
Juliet is greeted with a kiss from Paris, which she isn't pleased about, and whips out the dagger and threatens to kill herself as soon as he leaves.