Answer:
c) It takes away his sense of humanity and his ability to feel.
<u>Excerpt</u>
From the white landowners above him there had not been handed to him a chance to learn the meaning of loyalty, of sentiment, of tradition. Joy was as unknown to him as was despair. As a creature of the earth, he endured, hearty, whole, seemingly indestructible, with no regrets and no hope. He asked easy, drawling questions about me, his other son, his wife, and he laughed, amused, when I informed him of their destinies. I forgave him, and pitied him as my eyes looked past him to the unpainted wooden shack.
Explanation:
From the excerpt, Wright's father had lost the chance to learn the meaning of loyalty, of sentiment, of tradition, of joy and of despair. These are human attributes that humans feel. His time as a sharecropper had taken away his sense of humanity and ability to feel.
Parallelism I’m pretty sure because it’s talking about the same things, which is how they felt.
<span>In Emily Dickinson's poem the speaker describes hope as a bird.
</span><span>The stanzas, as in most of Dickinson’s lyrics, rhyme loosely in an ABAB scheme.
</span>The ABAB scheme describes rhyme scheme in which <span>the first and the third line rhyme each other and so do the second and the fourth line.</span>
Correct answer: B
Are would be the answer. Bc one of the cookies is missing doesn’t make sense to me