Answer:
Although one may not always get what they ask for, it is certain one will always learn for their past actions (positive effect). Learning is a process everyone endures as they get old; whether a lesson comes from a good deed or is the result of a wrong-doing.
One might learn that putting hard effort to achieve victory in a contest yields its rewards and provides a feeling of self-satisfaction, while realising that breaking into someone's home has its consequences once getting caught - witnessing the punishment on one's own flesh is very much different than hearing a condemn from parents.
No matter how old and wise, there's always something to learn. im a gangsta so i d c
Explanation:
I think that Tom's values become a microcosm for values of American society. Tom's choices in this story are reflections of his valuing material wealth and financial prosperity over the well-being of others. He is more concerned with the loss of his valuable property than he is with the murder of his wife by Old Scratch. He shows no sympathy for those who come to him seeking loans, and instead bleeds them dry. Tom's values lie in the wrong place, and in the end he is punished for it. Tom embraces a a world of greed: the same world that the author sees America embracing. Tom Walker is known throughout the Charles Bay for his greed, and it is this greed that leads him to sell his soul to the devil in exchange for money. Tom's plight is meant to warn readers not to let greed blind them, for, as is the case in "The Devil and Tom Walker," it can have disastrous consequences.
not sure if this has something to do with what you read or watched but i’m gonna assume the villian was defeated.
C) Maximum Effort. If it's his uttermost effort.