<span>We could not give her those glib assurances that naive souls make so easily to others concerning their after state. …
The narrator is making it clear here that he does not believe in an after life. He says that he cannot assure Mrs. Herd that she was going anywhere in an "after state" because he thinks people who say things like that are being 'glib' and 'naive'. </span>
Answer:
a rhymed couplet
Explanation:
The last two lines in a Shakespearean sonnet are always a rhymed couplet.
Hope this helps!
Answer: D. because he was sold as a slave several times along the way.
Olaudah Equiano was a writer and abolitionist from the Igbo region of Nigeria (although his birthplace is sometimes disputed). He was enslaved as a child and taken to the Caribbean. He earned his freedom in 1766 and moved to London, where he became an activist in the anti-slave movement. He published his autobiography <em>"The Interesting Narrative of Life of Olaudah Equiano"</em> in 1789, which helped pass the British Slave Trade Act of 1807. This act abolished the African slave trade.
A few of these answers could work but I think A or C would be most fitting!
Answer:
the colorful leaves fall from the tree.
Explanation: