Read the excerpt from chapter 2 of Night. And so an hour or two passed. Another scream jolted us. The woman had broken free of her bonds and was shouting louder than before: "Look at the fire! Look at the flames! Flames everywhere . . .” Once again, the young men bound and gagged her. When they actually struck her, people shouted their approval: "Keep her quiet! Make that madwoman shut up. She’s not the only one here . . .” She received several blows to the head, blows that could have been lethal. Her son was clinging desperately to her, not uttering a word. He was no longer crying.
Answer:
. He is able to share his observations about one event in depth
Explanation:
Given that A memoir is a biographical writing that consist of various memories about a real life person, instead of fiction. It is actually established on factual incident, written from the perception of the author.
Hence, with the memoir genre the author was able to show how terrible conditions can cause people to be unsympathetic to the pain of others, by providing the enormous details that are factual about the incident. He was able to give such extensive details through his observations about the event.
Therefore, the correct answer is "He is able to share his observations about one event in depth."
Answer:
B)It has no set meter.
Free verse poetry does not have a set meter or rhyme scheme. It has no specific structure. Free verse poetry can have as many stanzas as the poet chooses so this is not a deciding trait. Free verse poetry can also use figurative language such as alliteration, onomatopoeia, hyperbole, metaphor, simile, symbolism, etc. These do not make it free verse. The same goes for repetition. Repeating words does not make a free verse poem free verse or not free verse.
Explanation:
The danger of that statement is subjecting yourself to fate and letting things go according to how it has unfolded to you - if things go really bad and will affect a lot of people, not only you, who's to blame but you and not fate? Very dangerous a thought.
<span>Samuel Taylor Coleridge - Fantasy and supernatural William Wordsworth - Healing power of nature William Blake - Mysticism and spirituality Thomas Gray - Aspirations and potential of all human beings</span>
I'm not sure if there is supposed to be an additional picture ,but asking rhetorical questions is a clever way to make the reader think about what they are writing.