In this passage, the setting details that cause the narrator to feel uneasy are: (1) the dark furniture and (4) the curtains that sway because of an approaching storm.
Reference to the dark furniture is made in the lines <em>"...the gloomy furniture of the room"</em> and reference to the curtains that sway is made in the lines <em>"the dark and tattered draperies, which, tortured into motion by the breath of a rising tempest, swayed fitfully to and fro upon the walls, and rustled uneasily about the decorations of the bed".</em>
Answer:
nouns: betty, herself, doll, england, mr. Jenkins, employees, himself, audience, magnolias, trees, south.
verbs: accomplished, made, gave, dissapointed, left, grow.
Answer:
Between that time Alabama had witnessed bombings in Birmingham and there was a face off between Wallace and Federal Forces over the matter of the University of Alabama.
Explanation:
George Corley Wallace was born on 25th August 1919. He was a supporter of the Jim Crow laws of segregation. In 1962, Wallace was selected for governor and took his governorship on the promise of keeping with segregation and economic issues. According to the author, when in 1958, Wallace stood against John Patterson, he denied using segregation and race as a tool but after realizing the power of this tool he supported it when he again stood for the election in 1962. In his governance, he denied the enrollment of black students at the University of Alabama.
<u>On 15th September 1963, Birmingham witnessed bombings at the Street Baptist Church that killed four young girls and left many injured. The church was the congregation of black people and also a place where civil rights leaders would gather. There was a face-off between Wallace and Federal forces during that time.</u>
cause and effect: to explain the human behavior on the ocean
Answer:
<u>a)The sovereign beauty which I do admire, </u>
<u>Explanation:</u>
This line captures and best summarizes the central ideas of the love poem. That "sovereign beauty" admired by Edmund Spenser was ultimately referring to a woman; his second wife.
Thus, the entire writeup focuses on Edmund's admiration for this woman, <em>so much so that it propels him to write about her.</em>