Answer:
She shames him. She thinks the crime could be washed away. She also thinks if they ignore the situation it will take care of itself; if they can wash away their sins....then their conscience would be cleared - or so she thinks...
Explanation:
She is a manipulator and she is controlling. She can be violent and cold-blooded and will ridicule/shame him. She calls him a coward because he had not put the daggers where they were supposed to go. She goads him and even compares how he did not go through with the murder like he was supposed to, is also the type of husband he has become.
<span>Which writer influenced the development of the New Journalism movement in the United States?
</span><span>
Tom Wolfe </span>
Explanation:
ok so I'm confused what we gotta do for blank 1, 2 , and 3
Harriet Tubman was a slave who got whipped as a child whenever she misbehaved, so she ran away and worked as a planter for a man named James Cook. Education was unheard of because of race issues.
Answer:
Bronte creates sympathy for the girls at Lowood school by employing the literary device of personification and starkly describing the girls' less than favorable living conditions in the school.
Explanation:
- Bronte described Jane's first morning at Lowood school during a winter, the water in the pitchers the girls are meant to use for their morning ablutions are frozen and yet they have to use the water like that.
- During breakfast they were served burnt porridge they could not eat and consequently had to suffer through the morning to lunch time without eating anything, an event that Bronte suggested happened more than once.
- The girls are denied simple and harmless luxuries like keeping their natural curls and wearing clean stockings, a fact that ironically contrasts with the way the proprietor's family present themselves in artificial finery.
- When disease struck the inhabitants of Lowood Bronte described the dismal atmosphere using personification: "while disease had thus became an inhabitant of Lowood, and death its frequent visitor; while there was gloom within its walls; while its rooms and passages steamed with hospital smells." All the makes the reader feel sympathetic towards the girls, as they are living in conditions that are not fit to be lived in.