The best insight to life during the late 1600s, especially in the Colonies, is the uncertainty of life, how at the time nobody could take anything for granted.
Rowlandson learns from the attack that no one is guaranteed life, no life is above the mishaps of existence (which were even more plentiful at that time) and life can be short and brutal.
Nonetheless, another aspect of the story that offers a powerful insight into life at that time is her unwavering faith in God's will. Throughout the whole experience, Rowlandson keeps her faith and perceives everything that happens into a blessing or a doing of God.
It tells us how she chooses her place in society over greiving the death of a loved one
Right
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Answer:
be sure that you've first identified the story's plot
Explaniation:
the idea the writer wishes to convey about the subject—the writer's view of the world or a revelation about human nature. To identify the theme, be sure that you've first identified the story's plot, the way the story uses characterization, and the primary conflict in the story.
Answer:
Anne's diary was published and if it were not for those that loved her and wanted to remember her, it would have never been completed and shown to us. That diary is a document now that is used to describe the desperate attempts at survival by just this one Jewish family. Think of all of the other families. She named her diary, "Kitty". The story of a young girl who dies in the Holocaust gives us the reality of what these people had to go through. It also gives us a sense of how all of these people were betrayed. Anne's group was betrayed, but history does not say exactly who "told". Possibly, Miep? Her story speaks for all Jews who had to go into hiding.
Explanation:
Reading about the secret annex and the people she came across throughout her stay there, impacted her life. She was really innocent, yet she wrote as if she were a grown woman with experience. To read her experiences helps us to understand and to honor those that died with her and the number of people who perished in the Holocaust. One of my favorite lines from the story is where she describes the fact that she thinks that people are truly good. Even in her despair, she still believed that her people would one day survive.