The excerpt “<em>But what if I fail of my purpose here?/ It is but to keep the nerves at strain,/ To dry one’s eyes and laugh at a fall, / And, baffled, get up and begin again, /— So the chase takes up one’s life, that’s all</em>” reveals that the speaker will never give up the pursuit for his beloved: while the first verse contemplates the prospect of failure, the following disclose an inclination toward resilience that is reenforced in the other sections of the piece. The speaker’s views on love and the pursuit of love being a product of fate rather than the speaker's own will and romantic inclinations demonstrate how the acceptance of his fate and the manner with which he allows said fate to shape his life – and, to an extent, himself – is also a commentary on how love is perceived as a struggle, as an endeavour, as something that the speaker must adapt to in order to dominate. The speaker’s love for his beloved is not a passing fancy, it is something that he ultimately accepts and fights for.
Answer:
Accept Responsibility.
Are Self-Motivated.
Master Self-Management.
Are Interdependent.
Have Self-Awareness. You consciously think, believe, and behave in ways that keep you on course.
Believe in Life-Long Learning.
Have High EQ's (Emotional Intelligence).
Believe in Yourself.
Explanation:
Simile: The birthday party ended and the unhappy child was still screaming like a banshee.
Metaphor: The birthday party ended, but the child was still a banshee.
Answer:
I believe the answer is "the children were sent away from home to protect them from air raids."