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Answer:
The imagery Roosevelt uses in paragraph 12 of his speech is:
"Here destiny seems to have taken a long look"
This means that: The realization of what they expected to come might look long to come by but it will eventually be fulfilled.
Explanation:
The imagery made by Roosevelt in his speech gave a message of what destiny holds for them.
His speech was geared towards the need for faith and hope towards what the New World had in store for them.
Hello. You forgot to enter the answer options. The options are:
Julie’s parents celebrate Halloween, and her friends’ parents do not.
Julie’s parents like tea much more than her friends’ parents do.
Julie’s parents have different jobs than her friends’ parents do.
Julie’s parents prefer books, while her friends’ parents prefer TV.
Answer:
Julie’s parents like tea much more than her friends’ parents do.
Explanation:
This question is about "The Tea Ceremony" where the narrator shows that Julie's friends' parents might even like tea, but it didn't compare to the love Julie's parents had for that drink. Julie's country had a cabinet full of boxes with leaves to make tea and they only drank tea made straight from the leaves, because this, according to them, was the real tea.
he most obvious reason Arthur Miller wrote The Crucible (or anything else, really) is because he had a story to tell. Without that, he would not have been inspired to write. It is true, however, that what inspired him to write this particular story is quite personal.
As a Jewish man, Miller was a political advocate against the inequalities of race in America, and he was vocal in his support of labor and the unions. Because he was such an outspoken critic in these two areas, he was a prime target for Senator Joseph McCarthy and others who were on a mission to rid the country of Communism.
Miller was called before the House Committee on Un-American Activities because of his connections to these issues but refused to condemn any of his friends. This experience, a rather blind and sweeping condemnation of anything even remotely connected to Communism without sufficient (or any) evidence, is what prompted him to write about the Salem Witch trials.
In a later interview, Miller said the following:
It would probably never have occurred to me to write a play about the Salem witch trials of 1692 had I not seen some astonishing correspondences with that calamity in the America of the late 40s and early 50s. My basic need was to respond to a phenomenon which, with only small exaggeration, one could say paralysed a whole generation and in a short time dried up the habits of trust and toleration in public discourse.
However, the more he began to study the tragic events in Salem, the more he understood that McCarthy's hunt for Communists was nothing compared to the fanaticism which reigned in Salem in the 1690s.