i say the answer is b . If you are kind to people, they will be kind to you in return.
The first, third, and fourth.
Answer: summarizing ideas.
It is impossible to write a good summary of any type of information unless you have first read or watched the whole text, video or performance. In order to write a summary, you need to be familiar will all the main ideas of the work. You also need to be familiar with the details, as you need to decide which details are worth including in your summary. A summary is a useful tool when we want to be able to recall the important points of a work later on.
Answer:
The speaker prefers to celebrate the sabbath/ have church in the privacy of their own home.
Explanation: Throughout the poem, Dickinson talks about how the speaker worships in her own way. In stanza two, I believe, the speaker talks about how she doesn't need fancy clothes or anything, just her own 'wings'. She prefer stay at home, and worship God at her own pace, however he calls to her. She doesn't see the use in sitting through 'long sermons'.
Answer:
The main theme or message in the story "Marigolds" is the importance of empathy and compassion.
In the story, Lizabeth is reflecting on a crossroads in her life, an incident that marked the change from child to woman. She is apparently honest with readers in telling us how brutal and hostile she was on the day she attacked Miss Lottie verbally and then attacked her property.
Before the day she tore up the old lady's marigolds, she had not thought of Miss Lottie as a person. In fact, Lizabeth and her friends always used to yell, "Witch!" at the old lady. On that particular day, Lizabeth first took the leading role in yelling furiously at her, repeatedly calling her a witch. Later that day, she returned to her house and tore the marigolds out of the ground. Miss Lottie, however, did not yell at the girl; she just looked deeply sad and wondered why she did it. Lizabeth looked into the "sad, weary eyes" of another human being.
At the story's end, the adult Lizabeth explains the impact:
In that humiliating moment I looked beyond myself and into the depths of another person. This was the beginning of compassion, and one cannot have both compassion and innocence . . .