Answer:
The given lines are taken from the book "Their Eyes Were Watching God" by Zora Neale Hurston.
Explanation:
Zora Neale Hurston's <em>Their Eyes Were Watching God</em> tells the story of African American women trying to survive in the world of the white authority. The narrator Janie tells her friend Phoeby about her three husbands and the life she had to live, trying to survive.
The given passage is spoken by Nanny/ Janie's grandmother after her first marriage to Logan Killicks. And for Nanny, the union was a successful deal done, with land and a lawful husband, and all things that white women have. The passage reveals Nanny telling her granddaughter how a man and a woman should love equally. A man must have his pride and love a woman right, not kiss her foot and leg. Just like Nanny said <em>"when dey got to bow down tuh love, dey soon straightens up</em>". If he's kissing her foot and leg, meaning treating her too well, then there's only a short time when he will get back to his usual self.
Answer and explanation:
This is a passeage from a book called "1984" written by George Orwell and it is considered part of the classic literature. This is a political novel that is about how a citizen, a regular and ordinary man who goes by the name of Winston Smith is tired of how the government controls everyone in order for them to have them (the citizens) acting and thinking and living the way they (the government) want. He does not want to be part of that toxic behaviour, so he revels against the government.
Whom I suppose since it consists of people