Answer:
Adversity often leads to personal growth.
Explanation:
According to the passage from "The School Days of an Indian Girl,", it was narrated that a girl had a decision going in her favor when the judges awarded her first place, which caused a great uproar in the hall, both from her classmates who were jubilating and the losers who could not seem to accept defeat.
The theme that the excerpt most likely supports is that Adversity often leads to personal growth.
Answer:
Although I havent read this book, I can help you to find the answer.
1)
Look into the point when the protagonist handles the conflict in the story, (Usually i would take some notes, it really helps) think about the way that the conflict was handled. How is it <em>going </em>to effect the protagonist?
2)
How does theme develop in a story? It can be either explicit or implicit, right? If this story is implicit, than it will go through a series of events that will help you conclude what the theme is. (Normally you would discover this in the end of the story.) If you are looking for how it specificaly developed, make sure to look for events that would signify the development of the theme.
Which by I how I read the title, I take it the theme is about making a fire, or what the feeling the author expirenced during the making.
I hope this helps!
And please consider brainliest!!
I am dearly sorry if this did not answer your questions.
Geoffrey Chaucer was unable to complete the 120 stories that he planned to write in the Canterbury Tales because the number of pilgrims he had conceived was to be 31, including himself as the narrator, but he was only able to capture 24 stories.
- In Chaucer's planning, he intended that each pilgrim would tell two stories as they were going from London to Canterbury and two more stories on their return.
- The pilgrimage had not reached Canterbury before Chaucer died.
Thus, his death caused him to lose his lofty goal of completing 120 stories in the Canterbury Tales, detailing the satirical realism of the experiences of the pilgrims.
Read more about Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales at brainly.com/question/24916771