What Martin's questions reveal about her point of view toward Bates' work is that:
- Some inmates were able to relate to some of Shakespeare's works than many scholars because such inmates had such similar experiences.
This question is related to "Teaching Shakespeare in Maximum Security Prison"
<h3>About "Teaching Shakespeare in Maximum Security Prison"</h3>
"Teaching Shakespeare in Maximum Security Prison" is an article that was written by Mitchel Martin who interviewed Laura Bates.
Laura Bates is known to be author of “Shakespeare Saved My Life: Ten Years of Solitary with the Bard." In the story, she shared how she successfully taught Shakespeare works to inmates in a maximum security prison.
With her interaction with Martin, we discover that Bates' work reveal that the prisoners could relate to some of the events that transpired in some of Shakespeare's plays because they've had similar experiences before.
Learn more about Teaching Shakespeare in Maximum Security Prison on brainly.com/question/11944939
The pot is from an antiquity when all pots and vases were handmade
Lines 5-6: what is the distant look in your eyes?
Lines 13-14: what could have created such a scary creature and how?
Lines 23-24: allusion to God, how could God create something that is both beautiful and also terrifying and fearful?
The answer to this question is:
<span>Read these lines from the poem “The Bells,” by Edgar Allan Poe.
Which figure of speech is used?
How they tinkle, tinkle, tinkle,
In the icy air of night!
</span><span>C-"Onomatopoeia, Because it shows Tinkle Tinkle Tinkle which is a onomatopia"
</span> Hoped This Helped, <span>TStephymilabit
</span>Your Welcome :)