Answer:
The rosebush is nature’s offering to those who must enter or leave the prison.
Explanation:
Nathaniel Hawthorne's "The Scarlet Letter" revolves around the adultery conviction of Hester Prynne and the 'punishment' she must endure for the crime. This Puritan society's expectation of making a 'perfect' society where a sin like adultery is a major crime one can commit, and the eventual punishment that she must endure, bearing the "scarlet letter A" as a sign of her sin and punishment for all to see.
In the given excerpt from the very first chapter of the book, the speaker/ narrator describes the jail/prison entrance where there grew a while rose-bush. It offered its <em>"fragrance and fragile beauty to the prisoner as he went in, and to the condemned criminal as he came forth to his doom .... [as a] token that the deep heart of Nature could pity and be kind to him." </em>This <u>rosebush is a symbol of nature's offering to everyone who enters or leaves the prison. </u>
Choruses were comprised of:
Actors only
Hope this helps!!
This scene occurs when Balfour is on the small islet. Balfour gives into despair when he tires to cross the river but cannot -- it is too deep. He finds that his "yard" (a piece of wood he was saving to float on) has been carried away. Believing he has no way to escape the islet, he gives into despair and weeps.
Answer:it is not for Indian girls
Explanation:
This question is incomplete, here´s the complete question.
Read The Pied Piper of Hamelin
, by Robert Browning (1888)
What does the section from the lone surviving child’s perspective reveal about the Piper’s magic?
Answer: The Piper’s music enchanted them whit promises of a magical land.
Explanation:
The only surviving child from the Pipers music, a limping boy who didn´t make it on time to follow the rest of the children, explains that the magical music promised to lead them into a magical land full of amazing treats, such as plenty fruit-trees, beautiful flowers, bees that don´t sting, and winged horses.