<span>He repeatedly hints that he is too old to properly host</span>
The Full question reads;
Which piece of evidence best reveals how Elijah’s words contribute to Joe’s death?
A. “Looka theah, folkses!” cried Elijah Mosley, slapping his leg gleefully. “Theah they go, big as life an’ brassy as tacks.” (Paragraph 2)
B. “He rides that log down at the saw-mill jus’ like he struts ‘round wid another man’s wife — jus’ don’t give a kitty.” (Paragraph 5)
C. “Talkin’ like a man, Joe. Course that’s yo’ fambly affairs, but Ah like to see grit in anybody.” (Paragraph 16)
D. “Aw, Ah doan’t know. You never kin tell. He might turn him up an’ spank him furgettin’ in the way, but Spunk wouldn’t shoot no unarmed man.” (Paragraph 22)
Answer:
<u>D. “Aw, Ah doan’t know. You never kin tell. He might turn him up an’ spank him furgettin’ in the way, but Spunk wouldn’t shoot no unarmed man.” (Paragraph 22)</u>
<u>Explanation:</u>
In the short story entitled "SPUNK" by Ora Neale HURSTON which focuses mainly on three characters, namely Joe, Joe's wife, and Spunk. A beef is created when Spunk had an affair with Joe's wife, feeling bad Joe tries to confront's Spunk in which Elijah’s words led to his death.
The correct answer for the question that is being presented above is this one: <span>Denouement-B.We are left to wonder what was real and what was a dream; Falling action-A.The main character falls unconscious on the grave; Exposition-C.We learn that the woman died after developing a cough; Rising action-D.The main character looks for his lover's tombstone.</span>
The concept vocabulary allows the reader to see how Whitman had a very naturalistic worldview, which emphasized the abundance and extravagance of nature and the world.
Whitman was a naturalistic poet and emphasized how nature had enough resources for everyone, for that reason, not everyone should be united and happy.
This abundance and prosperity that nature could provide should be enough for people to live in peace, and it was this feeling that Whitman wanted to convey to his readers.
These words can be seen in the poem "On the Beach at Night Alone," in the lines:
- "vast similarity interlocks all"
- "This vast similarity spans them, and always has spann’d,"
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