The answer is B. "He asked himself where it had come from and how; the past provided no explanation, and the future could not justify it."
This option is not a dark humor because it does not show the opposite side of happiness. The other choices explain that although there is happiness, he considered it as a burden- making it a dark humor.
Answer:
Alice is trying to grow up too quickly.
Explanation:
<em>Through the Looking-Glass </em>is a novel written by Lewis Carroll as the sequel to <em>Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.</em>
In the given scene, the Red Queen reveals to Alice that the entire countryside is laid out in squares, like a huge chessboard, and offers to make Alice a queen if she can move all the way to the eighth rank/row in a chess match.
The symbolic meaning that can be drawn from the given excerpt is that Alice is trying to grow up too quickly. It seems like she wants to become a queen before it's time, before she has passed the proper examination.
A, barely acknowledges their existence
<span>Since he was in such a hurry, I told him to go on without me; however, he said he could wait, so we traveled together.</span>
Answer:
I think a Forearm Pass
Explanation:
In most cases this would be the easiest way to recieve the ball and counter attack therefor helping to score a point.
(Sorry if that is wrong, I am just going by what I know.)