Answer:
To preserve resources for the war effort, posters championed carpooling to save on gas, warned against wasting food and urged people to collect scrap metal to recycle into military materials.
Answer: a. Historical context
Explanation:
The historical context brings a great framework for the most diverse understandings of any reading that can be made.
Answer:
C. The ease and peacefulness of the season.
Explanation:
John Keats' poem "To Autumn" is an ode that pays homage to the season of autumn. Personifying the season, he details the season from the late maturation of the crops till the harvesting season.
Lines 19 to 22 of the poem goes like this -
<em>And sometimes like a gleaner thou dost keep
</em>
<em> Steady thy laden head across a brook;
</em>
<em> Or by a cyder-press, with patient look,
</em>
<em> Thou watchest the last oozings hours by hours.</em>
These lines personified the season autumn as someone like a gleaner, who gleans the fields for the last piece of grain. Or as someone who is watching the pressing of the cider from the apple. These four lines seem to be a commemoration of the ease and peacefulness of the autumn season.
Answer:
It highlights the fact that no one speaks out against the lottery even though it is murder
Explanation:
Mr. Harry Graves from the short story "The Lottery" is a symbolic and important man because of his rile in the book as people who "win" the Lottery are sent to him.
The Lottery is about a town who has a tradition of drawing from a pool of names and whoever is selected, is "sacrificed" to ensure that the town prospers. No one knows why this tradition is in place, but they do it anyways, even though they feel its wrong.
The importance of Mr Graves keeping silent through out the novel is that no one speaks out about the lottery, even though it is murder.