In the poem "Runagate, Runagate," Robert Hayden describes the escape of slaves who were running to the North trying to find freedom. He describes this in two different ways.
First, he talks from the point of view of the slave. He describes the fear that they felt running at night, as well as the determination that encouraged them. On the other hand, he describes the runaway slaves from the perspective of their master. The master describes them as scorpions, and warns of how difficult they are to catch.
The author uses these two points of view in order to increase the suspense and excitement of the text. He wants people to wonder what will happen and whether the slaves will be able to escape from their masters.
The answer is B. bi- in Greek means life and living.
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<em>The Tell-Tale Heart</em> is one of the shortest stories Edgar Allan Poe penned down, yet it remains a classic.
As in most of his work, Poe employs the first person point of view, in which the narrator tells the story using the first person pronoun <em>“I”</em> and thus closes the gap between the reader and the characters.
First person narration is subjective, we as an audience are brought into the biased point of view of the narrator, and this is why it is also known as an <u>”unreliable narrator”</u> – as opposed to the <em>“omniscient narrator”</em> who knows and sees everything and uses the third person point of view.
In this story, <em>the narrator is unreliable by nature</em>, a mad narrator that cannot tell the story objectively because he justifies his actions throughout the text.
The very first sentence hints at this:
- <em>“TRUE! — nervous — very, very dreadfully nervous I had been and am; but why will you say that I am mad? (…) Harken! and observe </em><em>how</em><em> </em><em>healthily — how calmly</em><em> I can tell you the whole story.”
</em>
We don’t even find out his name by the end of the story. It begins <em>in media res</em>, meaning in the middle of a conversation between the unreliable narrator and an unnamed character. He starts out very confident, stressing how calmly he can tell us what happened, trying to get us to trust him. Throughout the story he tries to reassure us that he is of a sound mind, that an insane person couldn't possibly plot a murder and the disposal of the body in such detail --
- <em>"If still you think me mad, you will think so no longer when I describe the wise precautions I took for the concealment of the body."</em>
He blames his very vaguely described disease for his impulsiveness that leads him to commit a murder which he by the end he confesses by blurting it out:
- <em>“"Villains!" I shrieked, "dissemble no more! I admit the deed! --tear up the planks! here, here! --It is the beating of his hideous heart!"” </em>
His paranoia drives him to confession and the story ends rather abruptly there.
Answer:
From the given poem, we can see the following about the themes.
Themes for the poem:
✔️Our earthly home is not forever, but our heavenly home is for all eternity.
✔️God's love sustains us in the pain and sorrow of loss
✔️Trust not in earthly goods, trust only in the love of God.
Inspirations For The Poem
✔️Anne Bradstreet's realization that she put too much hope and trust in her earthly goods.
✔️the burning down of Anne Bradstreet's home.
Audience for the poem
✔️a Christian from the early colonial period of American history
✔️a person who has suffered great unhappiness and misfortune
✔️a person who values their material possessions over spiritual values
Explanation:
As requested, I have been able to place each statement in the appropriate columns.
The poem's theme actually refers to the message or particular topic the poem is trying to convey.
The inspiration for the poem refers to the actual situations that inspired the author to write the poem. Those who pick lessons from the poem and who are spoken to through the poem are the audience.
The climax is when jason and percy fight, or when percy and annabeth fight the spider god and fall into tartuas