The answer is A because before but there is always a coma
Answer:
What is a novelist's obligation to the truth? The very word fiction implies untruth. When children read or hear a story that frightens them, they're told not to worry because “it's not true.” But for many stories to work, one has to suspend disbelief. So the essence of a novel appears to be something dishonest.
Explanation:
The phrase applies to an exiled man.
We can reach this conclusion because:
- "The Wanderer" is an Anglo-Saxon poem that portrays the disadvantages of being an exiled person.
- The poem presents a man who has been removed from his people and now walks without any company.
- The poem shows how difficult this life of solitude is, because, besides the lack of company, man lives without love and no one to count on.
- However, this man has great faith and believed that all the suffering he is experiencing will pass one day.
By this, when the speaker says "alone and unloved," he is referring to the way the exiled man lives.
More information:
brainly.com/question/11923260?referrer=searchResults
Alright so I never actually read the book so please take this with a grain of salt. From what I have just read it seems that Gogol comes to accept his non-American side and appreciate his Indian-American identity. I'm not sure why he comes to terms with it, but apparently he does. In the ending he sits down and reads the book his dad gives him by Nikolai Gogol. So yes, I think he does accept his name. However I strongly encourage you to verify that if you have the book. I hope this helped :)
Hey! look at this website!
https://www.ncourt.com/x-landing/Juris/MOStAnnCi/CMC_Court_Rules.pdf