In Jane Eyre, a teacher of history and grammar, Miss Scatcherd, whips Jane's best friend, Helen Burns. She also sentences Helen "to a dinner of bread and water . . . because she had blotted an exercise in copying it out." When Jane advises Helen to resist Miss Scatcherd's treatment, Helen tells her that "it is far better to endure patiently a smart which nobody feels but yourself, than to commit a hasty action whose evil consequences will extend to all connected with you; and besides, the Bible bids us return good for evil." Sometime later, Helen dies of consumption.
(I Hope This Helps)
Although many people in the world have claimed to be highly educated would be the best anyone can have that doesn’t outweigh the fact that many teens around the world are dropping out of high school and earning more then other adults doing things that school doesn’t teach. Just think instead of wasting your time at a school full of ignorant people you could be investing your time in something else that would actually give you a good future.
B) false :P
Your welcome meh freind
Answer:
B. Moved by extreme pity for him
Explanation:
The way Douglass describes the fugitive is sorrowful. He uses the words/phrases "merciful," "perfectly helpless," "suffering," "terrible gnawings of hunger,"..... These all lead to the conclusion that Douglass feels extreme pity for him.
So, the answer would be "B. Moved by extreme pity for him."
I hope this helps! :)
Answer:
the lord noun phrase
the is a detreminer
lord noun
and the loed promised is a clause
stand alone in as a sentence
promised verb 2
him objects pronoun
a