1. Usher invites the narrator for a visit.
2. The narrator encounters the Usher family physician.
3. Usher explains that his sister is dying.
4. Usher and the narrator spend their days reading.
5. Usher and the narrator take the coffin to the vault.
6. Both Usher and the narrator have difficulty sleeping.
7. The house of Usher is destroyed.
Answer: for girls Pop for both Rap for some Jazz
Explanation: THIS is AMERICA
(everybody has there own taste in music)

<u>Janet Kainembabazi Museveni</u> is the wife of the president of Uganda ~
Answer:
The meter and rhyme create the mood of anxiety and apprehension
Explanation:
Rhyme and meter beautify the poem. Longfellow has used iambic pentameter and varied rhyme scheme in this 15-line fifth stanza. The rhyme is abba cc dd ee ff gg with line 11 stand alone. 'Dead' and 'spell' shows the anxious mood since 'secret dead' reveals stressful apprehension. 'Hill' and 'still' show the place and horrible silence where people were caught and killed. Dread and tread is coming of more such horrible scenes of dead people. Though the air tells 'all's well', there is an apprehension of 'the place and the hour'. The line not rhymed exhibits the tense mood since the 'thoughts are bent' which means the mind is not in proper thinking mood because of deadly environment. In the river, 'a line of black' is the horror that is in the offing.
Answer:
Abolitionist author, Harriet Beecher Stowe rose to fame in 1851 with the publication of her best-selling book, Uncle Tom’s Cabin, which highlighted the evils of slavery, angered the slaveholding South, and inspired pro-slavery copy-cat works in defense of the institution of slavery.