Answer:
1. Roger Chillingworth is a man deficient in human warmth. His twisted, stooped, deformed shoulders mirror his distorted soul. From what the reader is told of his early years with Hester, he was a difficult husband.
2.Hester Prynne is beautiful, her beauty barely compares to her strength of character. Even when she is punished for her crime of adultery and publicly humiliated by being forced to wear a scarlet A on her chest, Hester does not break. She remains exactly who she is: strong, kind, proud, but also humble.
3.Dimmesdale, the personification of "human frailty and sorrow," is young, pale, and physically delicate. He has large, melancholy eyes and a tremulous mouth, suggesting great sensitivity. An ordained Puritan minister, he is well educated, and he has a philosophical turn of mind.
4.The illegitimate daughter of Hester Prynne and Arthur Dimmesdale. Pearl serves as a symbol of her mother's shame and triumph. At one point the narrator describes Pearl as "the scarlet letter endowed with life." Like the letter, Pearl is the public consequence of Hester's very private sin.
Explanation:
Do you have a picture or a file I can look at or..?
Answer: The answer is A and B.
Explanation: I guessed and got it right
<span>A postmodernist work is more likely to have B. a more playful attitude than a modernist work. This is because most of the modernist works revolved around the WWI, which was a dark and tragic time, and postmodernism started after the wars, so those were not a dominant topic of their literature. Thus, the authors could experiment more with the genre, be more playful, all the while still talking about serious topics, usually in a cynical and surreal way.</span>
Answer:
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Explanation: