Answer:
Romanticism
literary genre (early 1800s to end of Civil War) in response to formal/classical/traditional preceding period; after war of 1812, Americans want to establish our own national culture; Puritanism/Calvanism (strict, everything for a purpose) on the decline; desire to part from structure and logic of Enlightenment
Answer:
A). She was brave.
D). She lived near the sea.
G). She did some dangerous things.
Explanation:
The conclusions that can be drawn about the speaker in the poem 'I was a Skinny Tomboy kid' would be that 'she was brave, lived near the sea, and did some adventurous things.' <u>The descriptions of her 'being disguised as a boy, riding the bike, selling treasures, jumping off the roofs, traveling, running through the streets, etc.' show that she was valorous enough to do such things as a child</u>. <u><em>The deduction that 'She lived near the sea' is supported by the descriptions of the beach </em></u>where he rode her bike and 'sold her treasures to chinese guys.' Thus, <u>options A, D, and G</u> are the correct answers.
Answer:
He might encourage his voting base to attend rallies and fundraisers of his.
Explanation:
<em>To William Lloyd Garrison</em> was a poem written by John Greenleaf Whittier, who was an American Quaker poet, an advocate of the abolition of slavery in the United States, and considered a Fireside Poet. A term which referred to which a group of 19th-century American poets associated with New England, and whose poetry encompassed themes and messages of morality presented in conventional poetic forms.
In such poem, To William Lloyd Garrison, the author portrait the prominent American abolitionist, journalist, suffragist, and social reformer named William Lloyd Garrison as like a sort of fearless hero who fights against slavery. Similarly, in these verses, the author portrays himself as a supporter of Garrison's fight.