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2 votes
Which evidence best supports the conclusion that the

author admired the empress?
"She had on several plum-red under-robes of
different shades, an unlined costume of deep red ..
and an over-robe of richly embroidered light
green silk which made her look very young."
"I glanced again at the Shigei Sha, who was looking
extraordinarily pretty."
"I realized that no one in the world could equal her.'
11

User Blanka
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2 Answers

2 votes

Answer:

D

Step-by-step explanation:

User Leprechaun
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6 votes

Answer:

"I realized that no one in the world could equal her."

Step-by-step explanation:

"The Pillow Book" by Sei Shonagon provides a detailed account of life in the Court of Japanese royalty during the eleventh century. The book serves as an impressive insight into the life of palace royalty, infused with lively gossip, lively observations, and also brought forth the genre of "assorted writing" in literature.

The narrator/ speaker describes what she saw on the Empress and Shigei Sha. She admits that the "Shigei Sha . . . was magnificent, . . . [and] extraordinarily pretty". But to her, the Empress, with "her tranquil expression, her charming features which had recently taken on a more adult cast, and her complexion which went so beautifully with her scarlet clothes, I realized that no one in the world could equal her."

This supports her conclusion that she was more impressed with the Empress.

User Jayakumar J
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5.7k points