I just took the test or question thing and B and D are correct.
Thomas Paine was one of the founding fathers of the United States, a revolutionary.
Barry White was a grammy Award winning singer and songwriter, but he did not write politically charged songs.
Answer: Bob Dylan wrote hundreds of songs in his time, and he is a artist who is still living today. He wrote a song called "Political World."
Dylan Thomas was a Welsh poet and writer from the early 1900s.
Fate and free will is a crucial theme dealt by Christopher Marlowe, particularly in chapter five, where Faustus expresses these lines: Ah, there it stay’d. Why should’st thou not? Is not thy soul thine own?, In this chapter he decides willingly to sell his soul to Lucifer, but when he is willing to make the bargain, and he stabs his arm in an attempt to write the deed in blood, the blood congeals, so that it was impossible for Faustus to write his name, in other words he couldn’t sign the agreement with Lucifer. At that point of the story he wondered whether that was fate, if his own blood was protecting him, and saving him, preventing his soul to be sold to Lucifer. However, he finalized the pact with Lucifer and discovered on his arm the inscription “O, man fly”. That could be interpreted as a warning from God to Dr, Faustus to be free to live his fate instead of selling his soul to Lucifer. Thus, Fausto started wondering if he should repent and trust God. However, Fausto was lured by Lucifer and his evil angels; in spite of the fact of the different sign he saw that could have been a clear message to follow God , he willingly sold his soul to the devil.
All things considered, Fausto could have follow his fate, be free, not signing the pact when his blood congealed. However, he felt free to decide which path to follow by signing it and selling his soul. So, Marlowe is remarking that we all have a fate, but that fate does not condemn us, our own decision do, because we have free will to make our own decisions and make mistakes, even though if those mistakes are fatal.
Answer:
The main conflict in the book is what happens to Arn internally , how he deals with the things he has done and how he thinks he is a bad person for killing some of the people, leaving to America while all his family and how he feels like its best to keep this to himself and by him doing this he thinks things might get better since he's gone, because he also feels like he what he has done to others for his on survival and obeying the Khmer Rouge's rules and being like a toy that they can use when ever they want. He also feels like he doesn't deserve anything good from the things he has done to people. To survive Arn must obey the Khmer Rouge, even when they tell him to bury people alive. Because of this he feels like he is a monster. There are also a lot of parts in the book that are about how Arn has this tiger in his heart that keeps coming out and makes him do all the things without any feeling like he has no soul.
Explanation:
False I think sry if wrong