Answer: In "The Two Offers", Harper uses narrative techniques and ellipsis to neglect pieces of the events in the story so the reader figures out the rest on their own. This type of narrative technique is part of Harper's method in persuading her audience to support women's rights and look down on slavery. Some evidence of when Harper uses ellipsis is at the end of the story. "In her, the down-trodden slave found an earnest advocate; the flying fugitive remembered her kindness as he stepped cautiously through our Republic, to gain his freedom in a monarchial land, having broken the chains on which the rust of centuries had gathered." Janette dedicated herself to abolitionism, but the reader doesn't know until the final paragraph of the story. This type of effect causes the reader to connect Janette's abolitionism of slavery with women's rights and the other points that are presented throughout the story.
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