I think it's c. I chose the college that offers me the most options.
<u>Explanation:</u>
This story narrates the experience of two males, one an older uncle, the other a nephew (age six) to the uncle as they walk <em>"along a trail"</em> home. The Uncle whose age wasn't mentioned seemed surprised by the strength and vitality of his nephew named Kolman, for he said,
<em>"His head barely reaches my waist, but he plies his legs with great activity--circling around me, climbing onto low rocks, picking up sticks to throw downhill."</em>
As they continue their movement along the path, the uncle begins to reflect on what would happen to him physically when he continues to grow old. After observing the way leaves change their color from green in the spring to brown in the autumn, he said within himself,
<em>"I wonder if I am undergoing a similar change. As the urgency of my own green force abates, will formerly obscure aspects of my nature come to light? What will be revealed? Will my aging include the unveiling of a whole new palette of colors, and not a simple fade to gray?</em>
Finally, they both headed "all back to the house where the family waits with dinner".
Answer:
Black Hawk uses the simile to show that the white man is corrupting the natives and that it will be necessary to exterminate them for this corruption to end.
Explanation:
The text shows that the natives wanted to live in peace, separated from the whites who pursued them, hindered their paths and even corrupted them. In this way the author uses the simile to show how white men make the natives look like they are corrupt, liars, hypocrites and lazy people, making it impossible to get rid of them just by moving away and creating the need to defeat them so that the natives can live in peace.
Answer: argument, informative, and narrative writing
Explanation: