Answer:
As the new cat was liked by the wife, his fate or condition may be a bit different than that of Pluto, who the wife likens to the devil. Moreover, the narrator's guilt in killing Pluto may also play a part in his desire to not repeat the same monstrosity to the new animal.
Explanation:
Edgar Allen Poe's short story "The Black Cat" revolves around the story of how the unnamed narrator ended up as a death row prisoner. The short story illustrates how a person's mind can be the strongest influencer of one's character, even capable of bringing destruction.
The narrator had just killed his cat, Pluto out of anger which, he admits, he regretted the next day. And in his desire to get a replacement for the dead cat, he got a new one of almost the same appearance. He reveals <em>"It was a black cat -- a very large one -- fully as large as Pluto, and closely resembling him in every respect but one. Pluto had not a white hair upon any portion of his body; but this cat had a large, although indefinite splotch of white, covering nearly the whole region of the breast." </em>He also stated that the cat<em> "purred" </em>and <em>"appeared delighted" </em>to be with him, and in the end, both went home together.
But considering how the two got acquainted with each other, it seems like the same story all over again. The narrator will shower the new animal with love and attention, and the cat reciprocating the actions with its language. But what is different this time is that the wife liked the new cat while she did not like Pluto. This difference may become an important element in the later scenes.
It is clear that Wilde recognized the gender qualities of his day, and often tried to show these through the characters in his plays.
In "The Importance of Being Earnest" the interactions between the characters are often about power plays. Men in Wilde's day had greater influence than women. They made the important decisions for their families, while women worked at home, taking care of the children.
The respectable Miss Prism, a governess, clearly did not represent the norm in a society where men were admired for their intelligence and women for their beauty. As an unmarried woman in a society that centered on marriage, Miss Prism's role gave her identity and status where normally she would have had neither. But she was totally non-maternal, and horrified at the end when Jack called her "Mother." She harbored secret feelings for the parson, Dr Chasuble, but was too straight-laced to show them. The single male characters, on the other hand, had no qualms about flirting with the women they were attracted to.
Miss Prism is in some ways a comic character, but she does make a point for Wilde about the unfairness of the society of which they were a part.
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Personification, because of the "golden slumbers kiss your eyes"
personification is when you give something human attributes that otherwise does not have human attributes, in this case the "slumbers"
Answer: Well In my opinion there were probably a mix of wolves. Some were werewolves and the others were normal. If she were bitten by a werewolf then she would have been transformed automatically. While her parents were bitten by real wolves and died. I'm sorry if this doesn't make sense I don't have the biggest logic on werewolves but it was probably the pack leader for it to have been able to turn her into a werewolf. So the werewolf was either a alpha or just a regular werewolf who transmitted their DNA into her. Hope that makes sense!
a.the most difficult to construct
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