Jacks Agueros's “'Agua Viva,' A Sculpture by Alfred Gonzalez" tells the story of Filthy Fredo, a hermit that collects scrap iron to build creations in his workshop. Filthy Fredo, is mentally unstable, hasn't shave or take a bath in five years, and the only human interaction that he had during the story is with some neighborhood boys which resulted to be violent at first glance. The author uses iron as a metaphor to Fredo's obsessive world, which is impenetrable as the iron creations that he builds for defense against the real world. One excerpt of the story that implies this conclusion is "His house had become the lair of the iron woodchuck, the hive of the iron bee, the storeroom of the iron squirrel, the complex of chambers of the iron ant". The iron served as the metaphoric armor of Fredo, and the only thing he enjoyed to do as a hermit. However, he eventually had to deal with the consequences of the life he decided to live and his inevitable return to society.
Answer:
B. They first establish the idea that oppressed people have a right and duty to replace their government with a better one, and then argue that British rule of the colonies is one such example
Closest thing I could find or think of would be Thermocline. A point in which the warmer surface water mixes with the cooler deeper water
Answer:
Each relates an anecdote to appeal to the reader’s emotions.
Explanation:
Credential and political events are absent in both excerpts.
Each excerpt present individuals' anecdotes. The first excerpt talks about El lider baseball career and the second excerpt talks about narrator's interaction with Carolyn.
There aren't any references to the facts- only individuals' accounts.
When two or more tones fit together in a pleasing combination of sounds, harmony occurs.