Answer:
Anaphora
Explanation:
Anaphora is the repetition of a word or phrase in quick succession. I can see Anaphora in the poem by Jared Singer in the sentence,
<em>"Record everything they could have told you, </em>
<em>every how could I have let her go away, </em>
<em>every she was the best thing that ever happened to me."</em>
The repetition of the word, Every, is Anaphora.
Jared thus emphasizes what he would have done to assure Sarah that she was loved and protect her from taking her life.
It seems for Sanders that he should not feel guilty at all, because the men he had in his minds were not the same men as the daughters or other complaining women had in their minds of their father and other men, but he regrets not understanding these women complains at the time in the end of the text.
As in his childhood he grew with hard work men around him and women which would enjoy life in the house, caring for babies and going to supermarket he could not have the same view as the women that accused men of having privileged lives, because he could not even imagine the life of men, as bankers or architects, that were served by women and many times kept them in the house as in a prision, or abandoned them.
He is not a prosecutor as he closes the text saying “ I wasn't an enemy, in fact or in feeling. I was an ally ”.
Answer:
2. The image emphasizes that Mr. Shiftlet lives in an uncaring world.
Explanation:
Flannery O'Connor's short story "The Life You Save May Be Your Own" is part of the numerous short stories collection "A Good Man is Hard to Find". The story revolves around the character of Tom Shiflet and his acts in trying to survive the world, cheating Lucynell and her mother.
Similes are literary devices that compares words with another directly, a bit different from a metaphor (Metaphors compare things indirectly related). This simile in the sentence compares the words spoken by the old woman Lucynell to that of "<em>a group of buzzards in the top of a tree</em>". The "<em>ugly words</em>" of Mrs. Lucynell was that Shiflet was "<em>a poor disabled friendless drifting man</em>", but she also considers him capable enough to be her daughter's husband. This way of addressing him by the woman who expects him to marry her daughter shows that the world or society he lives in doesn't have much care about others, everyone for themselves.
Answer:
A. to tell a bigger story