Hello. You did not show the passage to which the question refers, which makes it impossible for it to be answered. In the meantime, I will try to help.
Inferences are conclusions that are drawn from reading a text. In this case, it is only possible to answer your question by reading the text, however, we know that these conclusions are related to the behavior of a character called Balto. In this case, we can consider that the behavior of a person can bring conclusions about the personality of that character, about the tension level of a scene, about the tone and mood of a text, about the characterization of another character, about the plot stage and many other things.
The answer is "Jimmy Valentine looked into her eyes, forgot what he was, and became another man"
Explanation:
In the story "A Retrieved Reformation" the protagonist is Jimmy Valentine who is a criminal. In this section of the story, the narrator describes the reactions of Jimmy as he feels captivated by a woman he sees in Elmore. About this, it is described once Jimmy sees her he "looked into her eyes, forgot what he was, and became another man"; this specific detail shows feeling in love has a great impact on Jimmy, and even makes him change who he is. Indeed, after meeting the woman he strives to leave crime. This detail supports the idea or theme "love can change a person" because Jimmy changes as he feels in love with Annabel Adams.
Answer:
Used primarily in Anglo-Saxon poetry, the epic poem Beowulf is full of kennings. For example, the term whale-road is used for the sea and "shepherd of evil" is used for Grendel. Other well known kennings include "battle sweat" for blood; "raven harvest" for corpse; and "sleep of the sword" for death.
<span>The topic that both Edgar Allan Poe's The Philosophy of Composition and Stephen King's On Writing address is the writer's craft. Both of these essays have to do with good writing, and the characteristis of writers who write good literary works, and some pieces of advice on what the could do to become even better. Poe's essay also has a detailed description of how he wrote The Raven, and the intricacies of rhyme, meter, theme, figures of speech are all laid out there. </span>