Another image showing what the park would looked like covered in trash.
I think its this one because it will show the affects of the trash at the park and how it will ruin its beauty and enjoyment.
Yes, because his mother taught him to look at the world not only from his own perspective, but also from other one. This will lead him to not judge a book by its cover and keep an open mind to others’ situations in the future.
Oedipus father was described as having negative attributes his civic decision he made was believing in the prophecy and sending to kill his own son
Answer:
"The Man He Killed" was written by the British Victorian poet and novelist Thomas Hardy, and first published in 1902. A dramatic monologue, the poem's speaker recounts having to kill a man in war with whom he had found himself "face to face." Talking casually throughout, the speaker discusses how this man could easily have been his friend, someone he might have, under different circumstances, had a drink with in an "ancient inn." Struggling to find a good reason for shooting the man, the speaker says it was "just so"—it was just what happens during war. The poem thus highlights the senselessness and wasteful tragedy of human conflict, and is specifically thought to have been inspired by the events of the Boer War in South Africa. Effect of war is the major theme of this poem. The poem is about the soldier killing another man because they are fighting on opposite fronts in the war. Ironically, the speaker fails to justify his action. He simply states that the deceased was his foe.
Explanation:
A great intellectual and cultural development in Europe and the United States is the source of many discoveries, inventions and revolutions, for example: Declaration of Independence of the USA or French Revolution. It's also the time of philosophers - like Montesquieu, Voltaire, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Diderot or d'Alembert - who all focus on the same subject: the questioning of political structures and traditional value systems such as religion, absolute monarchy, education, science etc.