Answer:
slavery. This book introduced him to the ideals of the Enlightenment and the American Revolution and
inspired him to perfect his oratorical skills.
At fifteen, following his master’s death, Douglass was returned to plantation life. He was unwilling to show
deference to his new owner, whom he refused to call “Master.” To crush Douglass’s rebellious spirit, he was
hired out to a notorious “slave breaker” named Edward Covey. For seven months, Douglass endured abuse
and beatings. But one hot August morning he could take no more. He fought back and defeated Covey in a fist
Explanation:
Answer:
c. The crowd thinks the man acted foolishly
Explanation:
In "Civil Peace," Jonathan observes that another man that was robbed of his egg-rasher in the market is berated by the crowd for not protecting his money.
The victim of the theft was lamenting but he did not receive any sympathy from the crowd as they think he acted foolishly.
Answer: This is an example of a Shakespearean sonnet because of:
- the abab, cdcd, efef, gg rhyme scheme
- the widespread use of iambic pentameter
- the use of three quatrains followed by a couplet
Explanation:
In 1609, Shakespeare published 154 sonnets, among which is Sonnet 19. The poem deals with the power of time.
This sonnet is representative of a Shakespearean sonnet because:
- It follows the typical the abab, cdcd, efef, gg rhyme scheme
- the widespread use of iambic pentameter (a rhyme scheme in which each line contains ten syllables -five pairs which are called iambs). For instance, <em>"But I forbid thee one more heinous crime." </em>
- the use of three quatrains followed by a couplet. The first twelve lines in a sonnet are divided into three quatrains (each containing 4 lines), followed by a couplet (two lines written in the same rhyme and meter).
IT is not a analogy so it has to be a category.