1. "Annabel Lee" - Edgar Allan Poe
2. the section of a sonnet that sets the theme- octave
3. pioneer of free verse- Walt Whitman
4. unrhymed iambic pentameter – blank verse
5. an example of consonance - "Success”
6. an example of irony "The Snake"
7. a word picture- image
8. a repetition of consonant sounds at the beginnings of words in a line of poetry- alliteration
9. a two-syllable foot
10. "Birches"- Robert Frost
The punctuation for this sentence is incorrect. Since you are attempting to combine two independent clauses with a conjuctive adverb (however). The correct way to punctuate this sentence is:
"Halloween has come and gone; however, many kids still have lots of sugar in them."
Hope this helps!
I have not read Odysseus in a while, but this is my best guess for the answer.
After Call to Adventure: Arrogance, curiosity
After Road of Trials: Humility, patience
I hope this helps!
Answer: The authors provide a primary-source quotation from a British abolitionist named William Wilberforce.
Explanation: It takes some careful reading of the article to match the content of the article with the descriptions in the answer options.
The first option is misleading. The passage mentions "the new bill that would limit British involvement in the slave trade" but there is no detail.
The second option is also misleading. The passage mentions "economic force" but there is no detail.
The fourth option is misleading. The passage mentions "Bristol, a port city with a harbor filled with slave ships" but there is no summary of that article.
The path to the right answer is paying attention to the point of the question: "to support the claim that many people joined the antislavery movement for moral reasons"
The correct answer refers to the sentence " William Wilberforce, another leader of the abolitionist cause, felt the new mood in his country. "God can turn the hearts of men," he marveled." Infer that moral reasons are tied to the notion that God can change hearts.