Answer:
Based on this information, what we can conclude about what Joey told Jessica and Felicia about the cabin is:
Joey told them something horrifying.
Explanation:
In general, what makes us afraid of falling asleep is something horrifying. For most people, horror movies or stories will do the trick, especially if they think they will dream about whatever it is they saw or that was described. This seems to be the case with the cabin Joey described. He probably talked of an abandoned cabin in the woods, where creaking noises can be heard and where hikers claim to have seen a ghost or monster of some kind. No wonder Felicia would push it to the back of her mind. Such a description would certainly make her afraid, maybe even make its way into her dreams.
Hello. This question is incomplete. The full question is:
Read the following excerpt from Henry David Thoreau's "Resistance to Civil Government"
It is truly enough said that a corporation has no conscience, but a corporation of conscientious men is a corporation with a conscience.
Which of these rhetorical devices does Thoreau use here?
Answer:
Parallelism
Explanation:
We can say that Thoreau used the parallelism in the paragraph shown above. That's because he wrote phrases that, in sequence, have equivalent meanings and a grammatical pattern that makes them similar within reading. This allows an idea to be highlighted and intensified during the reading of the text.
The pair of words is answerA
<h2>Who says i must another way/to fetch a ladder, by which your love/must climb a birds nest soon when it is dark in romeo and juliet</h2>
<h3><em><u>The </u></em><em><u>N</u></em><em><u>urse</u></em></h3><h2 />
Answer:This poem was part of Robert Louis Stevenson's collection of poems called A Child's Garden of Verses. Like many poems in the collection, "Travel" is written in the voice of a child, probably a boy. In this poem, the boy imagines being able to travel to faraway places, some real, some fictional. The land where golden apples grow may refer to the myth in which Hercules was tasked with obtaining the golden apples from the garden of the Hesperides. Another fictional land the boy would like to visit is the desert island where Robinson Crusoe, hero of Defoe's novel, lived. The boy then mentions a Muslim city, perhaps Constantinople, and China's great wall. Scenes from Egypt and Africa are envisioned. The last sixteen lines of the poem discuss finding an archaeological site of an ancient city, now empty, lying in the desert sands of Egypt. The boy describes the lonely city, all of whose boys, whether chimney sweeps or princes, have grown to manhood years ago