D because if you insert in danger of in the sentence where vulnerable is it still makes sense.
Of all the options listed, a Venn diagram and a compare-contrast chart would help the most with comparing two topics.
A numbered list isn't structured to compare topics, and is meant more for laying out information and making it easier to understand.
A cause/effect graphic organizer wouldn't necessarily be helpful to prepare for writing the essay, unless the topics had a correlated effect on each other (the cause/effect organizer would only work in certain situations, like comparing events).
Answer:
to make whatever was at the door to go away and disappear.
Explanation:
In "The Monkey's Paw," by W. W. Jacobs, even though Mrs. White is desperate and wants her son back, her husband thinks it would be insane to wish for Herbert back after he has been killed by a machinery. Thus, he begs his wife not to let "it"into the house because he believes that whatever is knocking at the door is not their real son. In fact, Herbert's body is mutilated and decomposed.
In Robert Frost's poem "Mending Wall", the narrator has (C.) an apple orchard on his side of the wall.
"Mending Wall" is a poem by Robert Frost and it is part of <em>North of Boston, </em>his second collection of poetry. <u>The poem focuses on the speaker's relationship with his neighbour and the wall that separates them</u>. Although the speaker questions the purpose of the wall throughout the poem, his neighbour thinks that "Good fences make good neighbours". Therefore, <u>while the narrator has an apple orchard on his side of the wall, his neighbour has a pine ("He is all pine and I am apple orchard")</u>. The wall is a symbol in the poem since instead of representing a barrier, it is a sign of the bond that exists between the two neighbours.