an elegant poem put to music
a mournful, plaintive ballad
a sensational disaster
The correct answer is plaintive ballad and mourning.
Elegiac broadside itself is a type of ballad which has a plaintive feel and which is mournful.
It is a poetry which tells the story of a life which is being lost. An elegiac broadside is being got from mournful feeling of a poetry.
If a story is being taught like a ballad, it is being recited for a person who has died.
The broadside is the paper which contains the announcements, the public information and the elegies.
A famous example of an elegiac broadside is the elegy.
An elegiac broadside is a large sheet of paper containing a mournful ballad, sold on the streets during the 16th and 17th centuries.
An elegiac broadside refers to a large sheet of paper that contains a mournful, plaintive ballad. These broadsides were typically sold on the streets and were popular during the 16th and 17th centuries. They often contained songs or poems that expressed sadness, loss, or lamentation, and were printed on a single sheet to be easily distributed.
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And here I was, wanting to reach out, to take his hands in mine, to make him gentle, to settle the demons he thought he saw in my sister’s face. I wanted to tame him—to save my sister’s life. Could I do that, only nineteen years old, a white girl “on the other side”—in his eyes, a traitor, a communist, with viciously dishonorable intentions of overthrowing the white apartheid government?
What does this passage suggest about Inglis's view of her situation?
It suggests, in plain language, her belief that it would be impossible for her to secure her sister's release.
It suggests, with vivid language, her sense of being seen as a dangerous revolutionary by the authorities in South Africa. **CORRECT ANSWER
It suggests, without saying it directly, her willingness to renounce her political beliefs in order to save the life of her sister.
It suggests, with great subtlety, her feeling that the authorities were wrong to think that she wanted to overthrow the government.
Answer:
It suggests, with vivid language, her sense of being seen as a dangerous revolutionary by the authorities in South Africa.
Explanation:
Inglis makes it clear in her text that despite being only a 19-year-old girl, she may be seen by African officials as a revolutionary just because of her skin color. The part of the text that evidences this is: " I wanted to tame him—to save my sister’s life. Could I do that, only nineteen years old, a white girl “on the other side”—in his eyes, a traitor, a communist, with viciously dishonorable intentions of overthrowing the white apartheid government?"
It suggests, with vivid language, her sense of being seen as a dangerous revolutionary by the authorities in South Africa.
Thanks for the answer ;D
Answer:
C
Explanation: