Answer:
Ok so Mary is a little girl whos parents died, she ends up moving in with Archibald Craven, her uncle. She then later on meets a boy who is supposedly sick- he ends up being Colin, who is Master Craven's ten-year-old son. One day as Mary is walking down the sidewalk with a bird, a gust of wind moves some of the ivy on the stone wall beside her. Under the ivy is a door, which Mary unlocks with the key she found the day before. Thus when she opens the secret door she finds herself standing inside the secret garden. While talking to Colin he throws a tantrum to make Mary into spending more time with him but shes fed up with his attitude and yells at him. She shows him that he really isn't sick like everyone says he is. Later after befriending Colin, she shows him her secret garden, to her surprise it belonged to his mother. Together they nurse the garden back to health.
As an adult, Wright has a different perspective of his father than he did when he was a child.
In the passage the speaker talks about his father when he says, "there had not been handed to him a chance". This makes it seem as though the speaker understands that his father did not have much of a choice. Then at the end of the passage the speaker says "I forgave him, and pitied him as my eyes look past him to the unpainted wooden shack." These details show that there has been some type of change in the speaker in regards to his father. At one point he may have blamed his father and been angry with him, but this frustration or annoyance is no longer there for the speaker. The way the speaker views his father has changed since he was a boy.
Based on the stage direction that she enters from "above," many directors have chosen to portray Juliet as entering: from the balcony.
<h3>What is the Balcony?</h3>
The Balcony is a setting and stage direction that has been used by many play directors to signify Juliet's entrance from above. However, it is worthy to note that Shakespeare never used the word balcony in the story and might have never heard of the word.
So, this stage direction used by many directors can be considered fictional.
Learn more about Stage Directions here:
brainly.com/question/3986419
Answer:
C(was upset about always acting as a peace maker