Maniac shows up at the McNabs with Mars Bar and its uncomfortable for everyone. The feelings of racism is clearly seen. The party game they played was white vs blacks. Soon Maniac is dragging Mars Bar out before a fight starts. Maniac finds hes proud of Mars Bar for his courage. Again, Maniac is homeless. He starts sleeping in a different backyard every night and early each morning he runs. One day he encounters Mars Bar and without talking, they run together. One morning, Piper comes for help, Russell is stuck out on the trestle over the water. Maniac just walks away.
Answer:
c) It explains the author’s feeling that she is not important to her father
Explanation:
From the passage of <em>Only Daughter, </em>the narrator talks about how her father is always boasting or complaining to everyone that cared to listen that he has seven sons. He would tell the parish priest, the Sears Roebuck employee, the cook, and any other person within reach.
This action of the narrator's father shows that she does not feel important to her father because everything he ever boasts about is his "seven sons" without even acknowledging her.
Any answers? Like A, B, C, and D?
I believe that Lady Macbeth's words to her husband most often express her dissatisfaction with him. She believes he is not strong enough, she is emasculating, making her husband feel he's not a real man. She often says she wished she were born a man, so that she could do everything her weak husband isn't capable of doing.