Both authors are speaking about the natural bond women have between them when they are dealing with feeding their families. Their's is the very center of how families divide the chores.
Because that is so, Alice Walker is able to tell us that the preparation of the food "delighted" the woman doing the preparation. She has given us an amazing incite into the way women think and act when they are happy.
The second, we are not give a phrase to latch onto, other than the mother is in a cheerful mood. We're not sure why, but we can guess that it was because she had help in the kitchen which she was not expecting. She likely did not need the help, but she found the companionship very agreeable.
Both samples seem to convey the same reason for happiness.
Personification for both because both of them are being compared to a non-living thing
In Act III, Scene 3, Hamlet has an opportunity to kill Claudius, but he doesn't act because he doesn't want to risk sending Claudius to heaven by killing him in prayer. Hamlet doesn't want to break the decorum. He wants to surprise a villain in some vile deed and kill him at that. "<span>He took my father grossly, full of bread,
</span><span>With all his crimes broad blown, as flush as May." If Claudius didn't care about his brother's immortal soul, Hamlet should now pay extra attention to Claudius' soul and do his best to send it to hell. </span>The very thought of the risk stops his sword.
Hamlet's inaction in Scene 3 is not just a result of plain superstition. Hamlet doesn't just want to kill and annihilate Claudius; he symbolically and unequivocally condemns his uncle's soul to hell. However, one scene later, he kills Polonius, mistaking him for Claudius. All his restraints are now off, and he is free to kill the person hiding behind the curtain.
This plot choice clearly shows that Hamlet always acts like an intellectual, even when he is hurt and offended. He has to rationalize both his inaction and his action. More precisely, thinking always precedes (and motivates) his actions and inactions. Irony has it that his action is misdirected, once it happens.
By the way, the R.A.C.E. analytical method contains Restatement, Answer, Citation, and Explanation. I think I've covered all the elements here.
Answer:
If you are bored you could always read novels
Explanation:
I can be a good friend btw
Answer:
about what father i didnt got it can u clarify it
Explanation: