Answer:
A
Explanation:
The first answer is the only answer. This parallel construction emphasizes that time has passed; no progress has been made. Look at the language. Read it carefully. Phrases like sadly crippled by the manacles of segregation and the chains of discrimination. Does this sound like there is anything that has moved forward when the language suggests that nothing has occurred since 1861.
Another example ... lives on lonely island of poverty in the midst of a vast ocean of material prosperity. The poetry reflects and states while one segment of society has become rich, the other segment has not. Nothing has been gained.
B: Where does it even hint at B? Where does it say that the freedom is effortless? Nowhere. Not B.
C: He doesn't advocate any common goal, not in this section. The purpose of this message is to point out that the colored have been short changed.
D: Again, he does not ask that the colored should strive for wealth. He wants change, not easily obtained wealth. Not D.
Kareem
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Answer:
"<em>I open my bag, spread out my little red kayak, and start to pump it up"</em>
The last line indicated excercebates to the underlying tension in the scene.
Salak had purposed in her mind to journey down the Timbuktu river in Africa.
Prior to this scene, she had been advised severally by her guide who even at this point (which is at the edge of the river) says he is unable to proceed any further. According to the narratives, no man had ever completed neither had any woman.
The odds were not in her favour at all.
The more the guide tries to dissuade her, the more her will crystallizes towards the decision to do so.
Finally, in the scene above, she starts to pump the Kayak (a light frame watertight canoe) in readiness to commence the journey amidst degenerating weather conditions.
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