The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman-Book 1 2nd Maze Questions (Second version)
Question Set 2(Heading South through Rednecks and Scalawags)
Eatmon/Hoy 8th ELA
Heading South After Jane and Ned walked all day by the river, they started to hear voices. Jane was scared and made Ned stay quiet. When they came round the bend in the river, they saw many people. Jane asked the white woman in charge if this was ________________. The white woman asked Jane why she and Ned wanted to go to Ohio. Jane told her to ____________. The white woman told Jane she was already free, but Jane said she didn’t __________ it. The white lady tried to get Jane and Ned to go back with her, but Jane __________. Jane didn’t want to be like her mama and ________
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They were _________ by an older black hunter who was also using the swamp as a place to hide. He was cooking a __________ and Jane and Ned happily partook in the meal. When the Jane and Ned awoke the next morning, the _____________ was gone.
The Old Man
As they continued on their journey, Jane and Ned came upon an old house where an even older man lived. He told Jane that Ohio wasn’t north. He said it was ___________ but Jane found that hard to believe. At that point, Jane began to think that she had been ____________ from the beginning by not listening to every person she’d been in contact with who had told her she was better to stay in ____________ than to head to Ohio. Ultimately, the old man told Jane it would probably take her ____________ to get to Ohio and that Ned wouldn’t make it at all.
Rednecks and Scalawags
A man named ________ took Jane and Ned to the home of a _____________. Mr. Bone afford to pay Jane $6 a month, minus 50 cents to school Ned. Eventually, Jane was paid ___________ a month because she worked as hard as any of the grown women did in the fields. Jane and Ned had nothing more than two beds made out of ______________ originally but after some time, she had the carpenter make her a ______________. That was the only furniture Jane had for the next
6. Incorrect Answer: E I chose E as my answer because I thought that a family’s “shoe-buckles” was a metaphor for generational family wealth. As a result, the narrator may have been denouncing the excess of the Dodsons families’ material wealth. This assumption is incorrect since the story indicates that the author was referring to actual shoe buckles, emphasizing the care that the Dodsons took in even the smallest of property.
Jane Long had a rough start of life but a great ending that changed the history of Texas for good. Jane Long was born on July 23, 1798 as the tenth child of her big family. Jane’s father, Capt. William Mackall, fought in the revolutionary war before she was born but died in 1799. In 1811 her mother, Ann Herbert Wilkinson, moved their family to Mississippi but died soon after in 1812 making Jane an orphan at age 14.
My name is Mildred Owens, I am 13 years old and my father had to go and fight in World War I. Today was the day that he finally got to return home to us. He had been away for almost a year. It was 1918, the end of World War I. The Last Battles had ended and we the americans had won the war.
The Broken Trail Home It was 1754 in Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, during the French and Indian war. We were all eating Mama’s homemade muffins, which I, Emma, am sure the President would be awestruck by if he had some .Just then, Mama came down the wooden stairs carrying baby James. We all laughed and chatted as a family should, but that was soon to change. As I turned to the fireplace to get another cup of water, I saw a dark figure endeavoring to escape out the back door.
Dickey push us to look further at the life of Jane McNaughton from the instant of seeing her jump to touch the end of a chain of paper rings (lines 15- 19) because he made me visualize her in her adulthood life. After reading these lines, I saw Jane McNaughton as a great dancer and successful woman because in line 19 (To see if she could reach it. She could,) makes me thinks he admire her and had high expectations about what she could achieve in her future life. However, in line 12 (But I cannot tell; that part of her is gone.) the speaker confused me because he makes me believe that something may happened to Jane McNaughton.
Journals, diaries, sketchbooks, or notebooks are places where we collect and store our thoughts and most of the times those notes do not make sense. In “Emmy Moore’s Journal” by Jane Bowles, Emmy writes a letter to her husband to clarify her stay at the Hotel Henry. In the letter she talks about (Turkish) women and femininity; she explains how she does not like being dependent and feminine. Jane Bowles uses the first person point of view and exclusive diction to convey her struggles and insecurities. Emmy starts by explaining to her audience that she’s going to write a letter to her husband, who she later describes.
The fog slipped through the night, hunched-shouldered, hiding from the sun. It stretched out every morning and evening, through towns, along roads, always searching. People would assume that this fog would not have a name, but this one did, although unpronounceable to a human. Its name was a sound that was a little like the vibrations of the tail of a rattle snake or Jack Frost’s bony fingers playing icicles like a harp.
As we look at marriages in today’s day and age, it is difficult for a man to be more dominant over his wife. Women are allowed to work in any profession they choose, and do not need to rely on a man for money. However, centuries ago in the progressive era, men were superior and dominant over their wife. Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s novel “The Yellow Wallpaper” portrays this type of image where a woman is controlled and trapped in her marriage by her husband John. In this era, they considered articles exposing issues like this as muckraking.
Name and Citation: Mary Sanders Lee, Individual and as the Conservator for the Estate of Kerry Sander; Kerry Sanders, Plaintiffs-Appellants, V. City of Los Angeles; A. Haddock, Officer, #25553; McCallester, Detective, #233680; Holmstorm, Detective, #320622; New York Department of Correctional Services, Defendants-Appellees Fact: Kerry Sander who has a history of mental illness who was mistakenly identified as Robert Sander. Robert Sander who committed a crime in New York State. One of Three LAPD Officers arrested Kerry Sander mistaken his identify him as Robert Sander. The officers sent Kerry to New York where Kerry remain incarcerated until 1995. Robert Sander was later arrested by Drug Enforcement Agent.
What It Is And What It Was Settlement house founder and peace activists Jane Addams was one of the most distinguished of the first generation of college-educated women, rejecting marriage. Instead of have a life with children and a husband she decided to devote her whole life was a commitment to helping the poor and social reform. She was inspired by english reformers who intentionally resided in lower-class slums.
How Miss Jane and Joe Pittman met One day Miss Jane was out working at the plantation and she saw thing handsome guy go by. Miss Jane did not think anything of the man, so she went back to work. Later that day the same guy rode by on the same horse and he stopped the second time around. She was flattered that he had stop and started talking. His name was Joe Pittman
Later that night, Mr. and Mrs. Patterson snuck into our wagon. They quietly, without waking me up, bound me with rope and were just about to leave when, Mr. Patterson stepped on a pan and woke up my sister. “Help, Billy is being kidnapped!” Maggie screamed. That was sure to wake up my parents.
I arrived at Aunt Rachel’s house for my first summer at Maycomb. When I first arrived, Aunt Rachel was very glad to see me. We ate dinner and then Aunt Rachel forced me to retreat to bed. Early the next morning I got dressed and ate breakfast until my stomach was satisfied with the meal. I went outside to relax in Aunt Rachel’s collard patch.
The Pursuit of Justice for Women Through the Comparison of Glaspell's Trifles and A Jury of Her Peers Susan Glaspell first wrote the play "Trifles" and then a short time later followed up with the short story "A Jury of Her Peers". The story and the play contain many parallels such as: the setting, the plot, and the same characters. Even though they are very similar they have different titles which seem to be fitting for each. In the play, Hale states that women are constantly "worrying over trifles. " Yet, these trifles are the evidence the men need to convict Minnie.
Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s “The Yellow Wallpaper” critiques Victorian womanhood in several ways throughout the text. Victorian women were expected to be pure, dainty, and perfectly angelic. They were also expected to be perfect mothers, wives, and hostesses at all times. If a woman were to express too much emotion, she would be called hysterical. Hysteria was considered a medical condition which rendered a woman incapable of reason or generally thinking like an adult.