Answer: Pope Urban the second !!
The correct answer is C, as the Narrative of Sojourner Truth was published in 1850, eleven years before the Civil War. As it tells the story of the life of Sojourner Truth until that year, it has to take place before it.
Sojourner Truth (1797 - 1883) was an abolitionist and activist for women's rights. Truth was born under slavery, but escaped with her daughter in 1826. After turning to the courts to recover her son, she became the first black woman to win a trial against a white man. Sojourner's birth name was Isabella ("Bell") Baumfree. She changed her name to Sojourner Truth in 1843. She is widely known for her speech "Ain't I a Woman?", Which was pronounced in 1851 at the "Ohio Women's Rights Convention" in Akron, Ohio. During the American Civil War Truth helped in the recruitment of black troops for the American Navy. After the war, she tried unsuccessfully to obtain land grants from the Federal State for former slaves.
Once in Social Studies, we were going over a homework from the night before it had a paragraph that you had to read and you had to write what type of government it talked about and I was kind of praying that she wouldn't call on me to read one of the paragraphs and...she did I froze up and my face turned soo red I tried to read but nothing would come out everybody was laughing hard and I was soo embarrassed and she didn't get the picture that I wasn't gonna read it until like 5 minutes later!! and I started crying a little and everything it was the most embarrassing moment of my entire life.
Answer:
The whole town now feels that Wickham is a terrible person.
Explanation:
"Pride and Prejudice" is one of the most famous novels by English author Jane Austen (1775-1817). It develops themes concerning love, differences in class and status, and how influential society could be over people's lives.
Mr. Wickham, at the beginning of the novel, was seen by all as the most charming of young men. The whole town of Meryton spoke well of his manners, and several young girls were in love with him. However,<u> in chapter 48, everything changes. After Wickham elopes with Lydia Bennet, which was an awful thing to do in the past, the town of Meryton begins to speak ill of him. Everyone now has some complaint, especially concerning Wickham's debts. And everyone now says they always knew he was not as good a person as he seemed to be.</u>
Mr. Parsons' note in the clack-clack approach of the beggar describes the sound of the beggar approaching, rather than the sight of the beggar coming. This foreshadows Mr. Parsons' blindness.