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When Harriet’s blood is described as having a ‘___________’ by Kate, the author’s use of visceral visual imagery evokes a sense of admiration and obsession. This makes Harriet seem ‘_________’ m and portrays her seemingly innocent friendship with Harriet as having ulterior motives.
‘blossoming, luminous quality’
Harriet’s attention makes her ‘_______’
‘alive’
Harriet’s quiet ______
‘quiet triumph behind’
When Kate expresses _____ to Harriet because _________
‘bravo’ to Harriet for they ‘have never played like this before’,
When Harriet went whale watching, Kate felt
‘not feverish as much as agitated’
When Kate is pleading __________
‘oh Harriet, my Harriet’,
Kate depicts her insides as
‘awry’ and ‘rotten’ with ‘putrefying flesh’
The author uses the setting of the ‘___________’
Additionally, the author uses the setting of the ‘ragged coast encased in the blue abyss’
When calling Albert’s brother ‘________’ after he calls her poetry ‘____________’
‘ignorant’ after he calls her poetry ‘nonsense,’
When Kate recalls relishing ‘___________’
‘the power’
Kate wants to make Harriet
‘plead’
The author’s use of setting when Kate describes the ‘________’ that lies ‘________’,
‘the threat’ that lies ‘beyond the wall’,
The stain on Kate’s hankerchief is ‘______’
‘there for good’
Expounding that Harriet’s face lights up as ‘_______________’
‘as if the fire were in her and not the hearth’
When the girls change their adventures and begin to take ‘__________’
‘the same path over again’
Harriet seems ‘__________’ from everyone on the cape, and ‘________’
‘separate’ ________‘better’