Answer:
See explanation for answer.
Explanation:
His eyes squinted, bloody red, and filled tears. His lips pursed shut, cause he doesn't like to open up to any. So there he sat along the road, close to an alley, with no one. Me hoping that one day things will turn out better for that young boy like they did for me. Sending my prayers to him I drove off into that cold, rainy night.
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Answer:that it was deadly
Explanation:
Answer:
I believe that the best answer to the question here: What does this excerpt from the end of "The Yellow Wallpaper" tell the reader, would be, C: The narrator believes the window bars will not allow her to escape.
Explanation:
"The Yellow Wallpaper" is a short story by Charlotte Perkins Stetson about a woman who has to spend her entire summer vacation cooped up in a mansion, and particularly an old nursery room papered with yellow wallpaper, with her husband John, his sister and their child. Although at first the woman, who is the narrator, tells us that she despises the wallpaper, as time goes by, and since she is forced to remain where she is, she starts to develop a sort of interest in it as she starts to see that there is much more to the paper than she first thought. Images, and then figures, start to appear, until she is sure she sees a woman´s shape behind the jail-like pattern. At the same time, she starts to see that the woman from the paper also appears on the garden outside, creeping. The appearance of disappearance both in the pattern, or the garden, will depend entirely on the light (sunlight or moonlight), and depending on the reflections on the windows, that woman will turn into many. At the end of the story the narrator and the woman from the pattern become one but they realize they cannot escape, as the windows are barred and cannot be opened. So, it almost seems like she tells herself that even if she had wanted to, she won´t because she cannot open them, it would be misunderstood by others and besides, she could see multiple women out there, creeping, like she did. It almost becomes like the wanderings of a child who knows she cannot get away with what she wanted to do originally, but still gives herself justification for not trying it. That is why the best choice is C.
Answer:
B). "He came to know that men were more just... and women more kindly."
Explanation:
The line 'He came...kindly' most likely alters the prediction that White Fang will learn to admire or appreciate the humans as it displays that he got to know about the cruel and inhumane side of the humans. The other options suggests that 'he came to know about the ways of man-aniimals and their godliness , he began to learn their ways or wishes and the power they displayed to enforce that wish and thus, he felt he must show obedience to them.' Thus, <u>option B</u> is the correct answer.
Answer:
"I put on my PLAID bathrobe..."
"was covered in DENSE fog."
"As I was trying to PROD the window closed..."
"I thought of the THREAT of..."
"...full of DREAD."