<span>There are many illustrations of alliteration in the poem ‘Silver’ by Walter de la Mare: “Slowly, silently”, “silver shoon”, “silver stream”, “beams beneath” and “casements catch”.</span>
Answer:
<u>The correct answer is (A) She wants to protect her unborn child.</u>
Explanation:
Mary is about six months pregnant when she finds out that her husband is going to leave her.
This comes as a shock to her. She is very agitated and impulsive at this point.
Hence in the heat of the moment, she kills her husband.
<em>She did not want to go to prison because she can not bear the fact that they will take her child away from her.</em>
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<em>She even thinks that they might kill her unborn child.</em>
She could not bear the thought of this, hence she decided to cover up the murder.
I believe that the options that best describe the qualities of the tragic heroine in these two passages are:
- They both show the main character sacrificing her life for her principles.
- They both show the main character experiencing a downfall and awaiting death.
- They both show moments in the main characters' experiences that evoke pity.
The tragic heroine trope portrays a female protagonist who ends up suffering terribly due to a fatal flaw in her character.
In the passage of Fitzgerald's "The great Gatsby", the reader can infer that the story conflict will be based on wealth and appearances, because of the contrast between the narrator's house, an "eyesore", and that of his neighbors, "white palaces".
Answer:
Explanation:
I think is D i dont know if this is right