The answer would be D. voice.
I hope you find my answer helpful. :)
Answer:
Yet before the narrator goes any further in the tale, he describes the circumstances and the social rank of each pilgrim. He describes each one in turn, starting with the highest status individuals. Chaucer's voice, in re-telling the tales as accurately as he can, entirely disappears into that of his characters, and thus the Tales operates almost like a drama. Where do Chaucer's writerly and narratorial voices end, and his characters' voices begin? This self-vanishing quality is key to the Tales, and perhaps explains why there is one pilgrim who is not described at all so far, but who is certainly on the pilgrimage - and he is the most fascinating, and the most important by far: a poet and statesman by the name of Geoffrey Chaucer.
Explanation:
Have in mind that Eudora's childhood had many characteristics that she could apply in her writings. Pay attention to the following:
1. She was the only gril and the thir one out of three sons
2. The love of reading she had is due to the fact that her mother, a school teacher, believed that <span> "any room in our house, at any time in the day, was there to read in, or to be read to".
3. Eudrora used technology simbolism in her stories due to the fact that her father </span><span>was intrigued by gadgets and machines and inspired in Eudora a love of all things mechanical.
4. Her parents used to read books to each other in the evenings, which was a milestone in eudora's desire to write books
I know you can relate these expereinces to the excerpt you have </span>
Answer:
I'm sorry what are you trying to say
The correct answer is...
<u>B. Showing mercy is more important than revenge.</u>
<u>Being betrayed by others is painful.</u>