Thanks for the points but yeah she did get annoying
Answer:
Charlie, and the reader as well, both begin to have an inkling that his intelligence may not be permanent as he listens to Dr. Nemur's presentation in "Progress Report 13." Charlie even realizes that Nemur did not take into account his rapid rise in intelligence, and that now, Charlie may even regress into a lower IQ than before the experiment.
Answer: "Glide softly to thy rest then;"
"And we will trust in God to see thee yet again."
Explanation:
The two lines in this excerpt from the poem that reflect the theme of the poem is : "Glide softly to thy rest then;"
"And we will trust in God to see thee yet again.".
The poem simply describes the path of a tuberculosis patient and she went to heaven. The speaker begins by describing the death by saying words like "set for the grave". Then, the speaker describes the way that she'll depart for heaven.
You cite the source(s) you used. Basically giving them credit for their work. It helps to avoid plagiarism.<span />
For the first beginning of the story, Scout and Jem assume Boo Radley is a evil person. However by him doing this, it shows that things are not always as they may seem because giving her the blanket shows that he isn't as evil as the believe, which ties into the main theme of the book.