Use the recommended structure for a summary: begin by introducing the text with answers to the who, what, where, when and why questions, then provide a one- or two-sentence statement of what the author's main argument is (this statement should explain what the author wants their audience to think and/or do), then proceed through the main points/ideas, making sure that it is clear how these ideas fit with the main argument. The three parts of your Annotated Bibliography: Summarize Margaret Cavendish's "Letter 55." Do your best to summarize the entire letter, indicating how each part of the essay relates to its other parts. Summarize Martin Luther King, Jr.'s "Letter from Birmingham Jail." Do your best to summarize the entire essay, indicating how each part of the essay relates to its other parts. Summarize Mary Wollstonecraft's "To M. Talleyrand-Perigord, Late Bishop of Autun." Do your best to summarize the entire essay, indicating how each part of the essay relates to its other parts. Your assignment should be typed out using double-spacing and it should be formatted in the exact same way as the example of an annotated bibliography that was supplied on our eLearn website. Please note that each summary should begin with the publication information for the text you are summarizing. That publication information is supplied on our eLearn website--you can just copy and paste that publication information onto your assignment. 3. Submit your assignment as a .pdf file. 4. Answer all 3 of the questions below, providing 250-350 words per summary (which is about the length of one long paragraph, or two medium-length paragraphs). This is a strict word limit, but it would not include any long quotations you provide. 5. Make sure to properly quote and paraphrase, and to supply page numbers for each quotation. If you don’t, then you could get a very low grade. 6. Do not use any internet sources. However, if you do use internet sources, you must cite them. If you used uncited internet sources, you could fail the exam. Write your summary as if your reader has not read the essay you are summarizing.