<p>Yeah I put pulling down too</p>
<p>The answer for the last two lines of the adultery poem was admonitory (it means to give a warning, so i'm guessing that's right)</p>
<p>And I put despair and self-pity as well</p>
<p>same answers here....!!!!! process of elimination admonitory...yes!</p>
<p>i put infirmity for describing the father</p>
<p>me too!! i figured infirmiry = hospital/nurses, something in that realm... infirmity must be the answer.</p>
<p>Carnations
-delight</p>
<p>Adultry
-admonitoring</p>
<p>Carriage/Senator
-objectify
-"pulling down" was not ironic</p>
<p>Honeymoon
-girl=despair
-guy=self-pity</p>
<p>Hating Parents
-She described her father's infirmity</p>
<p>Love Letter
-muse refered to the Intervention (question refered to nature, I think)</p>
<p>Those are what I put, and I am pretty sure they are right. In the passage about the visit to O'Connor's house, the narrator was most angered by his/her mother's comments/attitudes, right?</p>
<p>I thought the story was a suppose to be like an allegory, and her mother represented the generational gap and social change. Cause she condoned like slavery/segregation, lack of women's rights, etc?</p>
<p>What was the quotation that summed up the passage, too?</p>
<p>^^So did I! because the narrator said that her dad was a lot older than her mom Yeah totally agree that test was killer.</p>
<p>I guessed authority for the dad instead of infirmity because he was forcing the mother to get his herbs and wouldn't listen to his doctors.</p>
<p>i think the quotation to sum it up would be "i would change it all" or something</p>
<p>she seems revolutionary and pretty mad black woman during the whole story</p>
<p>Oh, there was also a question that was like what does the narrator admire most about Flannery O'Connor... I put that she still works even though she is ill</p>
<p>i dont remember putting that she still works</p>
<p>and my quotation was like something about how she would make everything equal if she could. and for the answer i put wry for something...</p>
<p>I thought it was characterization and style for admiring O'Connor</p>
<p>yea i remember putting that, it was stately clearly towards teh end</p>
<p>Wait, I put characterization and style... I must be mixing up questions haha</p>
<p>yea, basically that test is just a blur to me now!</p>
<p>I couldn't decide between that and like how she wrote for change.
that's not really how it was worded but something like that.
I would probably have to see the options again.</p>
<p>Cause O'Connor was a radical feminist, supporting both women's and black's gaining of equal rights and criticizing society. I think that I didn't choose characterization/style but like that she fought discrimination.
I thought she wrote "The Yellow Wallpaper" but turns out that was Gilman>
Great short story. <a href="http://www.library.csi.cuny.edu/dept/history/lavender/wallpaper.html%5B/url%5D">http://www.library.csi.cuny.edu/dept/history/lavender/wallpaper.html</a></p>
<p>Oh I remember one that I was contemplating! On the Flannery O'Connor one, there was a question that asked something like what thegrass was supposed to mean... I think I put financial success or something</p>
<p>I thought it was envy, which was why the author thought the quote, "the grass is greener on the other side" was incorrect or something</p>
<p>mine was between financial success adn public acclaim...i ended up putting financial success.</p>