The answers are: It does not allow listeners to interpret each character through his or her tone; and it does not allow listeners to review or reread what each character has said.
When hearing the characters voices out loud, and in the hypothetical case that it is a live audition and not a recording, one, as part of the audience, does not have, evidently, the possibility of reviewing or rereading what each character says. This may seem vane, but in reality, it can be very important when reading since sometimes the sense of what´s being read is so profound that, in order to capture in full, one needs to review a certain passage.
Also, hearing the characters has the disadvantage of making their voices concrete and specific according to whoever is speaking. This leaves out the possibility of filling the character´s voice with one´s own imagination, wit, and fantasy, which usually are very important characteristics of a fictional character (literature, in the end, is always a very subjective activity on the side of the reader).
Where's the excerpt?
<span>Williams described the natives as very human. </span>
The reason why Thami points out that there were many more slaves in Egypt than soldiers is to show the cruelty of the Pharoah in his building of the pyramids.
Thami references the building of the pyramids and laments that there are more slaves than there are soldiers in Egypt.
<h3>What is Slavery?</h3>
This refers to the subjugation of a person where he is reduced to a commodity to be bought and sold and used for labor.
Hence, we can see that based on the given poem, there is the narration by Thami about the use of slaves to build the pyramids in Egypt.
This observation also shows that there were many more slaves in Egypt than soldiers and this was to show the cruelty of the Pharoah in his building of the pyramids.
Read more about slavery here:
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I’m pretty sure it might me topic sentence, that’s what clicked in my head but i don’t know. so sorry if it’s wrong